Abstract

The surface imprinting technique has been developed to overcome the mass-transfer difficulty, but the utilization ratio of template molecules in the imprinting procedure still remains a challengeable task to be improved. In this work, specifically designed surface-imprinted microspheres were prepared by a template-oriented method for enantioseparation of amlodipine besylate. Submicron mesoporous silica microspheres were surface-modified with double bonds, followed by polymerizing methacrylic acid to generate carboxyl modified mesoporous silica microspheres (PMAA@SiO2 ). Afterwards, PMAA@SiO2 was densely adsorbed with (S)-amlodipine molecules to immobilize template molecules through multiple hydrogen bonding interactions. Then surface molecular imprinting was carried out by cross-linking the carboxyl group of PMAA@SiO2 with ethylene glycol diglycidyl ether. The surface-imprinted microspheres showed fast binding kinetics of only 20min for equilibrium adsorption, and the saturation adsorption capacity reached 137mg/g. The imprinted materials displayed appreciable chiral separation ability when used as column chromatography for enantioseparation of amlodipine from amlodipine besylate, and the enantiomeric excess of (S)-amlodipine reached 13.8% with only 2.3cm column length by no extra chiral additives. Besides, the imprinted materials exhibited excellent reusability, and this allows the potential application for amplification production of amlodipine enantiomer.

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