Electrophoresis, Vol.21, No.10, 2043-2050, 2000
Electrically driven microseparation methods for pesticides and metabolites: IV. Effects of the nature of fluorescent labels on the enantioseparation of pesticides and their degradation products by capillary zone electrophoresis with UV and laser-induced fluorescence detection
Three different fluorescent tags, namely 5-aminonaphthalene-1-sulfonic acid (ANSA), 7-aminonaphthalene-1,3-disulfonic acid (ANDSA), and 8-aminonaphthalene-1,3,6-trisulfonic acid (ANTS) were evaluated in the precolumn derivatization of some chiral phenoxy acid herbicides, some chiral transformation products of pyrethroid insecticides, and in their subsequent enantiomeric separation by capillary electrophoresis (CE). The electrolyte systems consisted of sodium phosphate buffers containing chiral surfactants such as octylglucoside (OG) or octylmaltoside (OM) at concentrations above the critical micellar concentration (CMC). Among the three different tags investigated, the ANDSA derivatives of the various solutes were more readily enantio-separated than the ANSA and ANTS derivatives. While the tagging with ANSA allowed the enantioseparation of a limited number of the chiral solute-ANSA derivatives investigated, the ANTS derivatization yielded derivatives that could not be enantioseparated. The polarity of the three different tags increases by increasing the number of sulfonic; acid groups in the molecule in the following order: ANSA (one sulfonic acid) < ANDSA (two sulfonic acid groups) < ANTS (three sulfonic acid groups). This seems to indicate that the intermediate polarity of the ANDSA tag allowed more equitable nonpolar/polar interactions of the ANDSA-derivatized solutes with the OG. or OM micelles, and consequently the enantioseparation of the solute-ANDSA derivatives. Thus, there is a solute polarity window for enantioresolution with alkylglycoside micelle by CE. Solutes of intermediate polarity that undergo more equitable nonpolar/polar interactions with the micelles exhibited chiral separations.