Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9749088 | Journal of Chromatography A | 2005 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
Salicin in the bark extract of Salix alba and amygdalin in the fruit extract of Semen armeniacae were each separated by slow rotary counter-current chromatography (SRCCC). The apparatus was equipped with a 40-L column made of 17Â mm i.d. convoluted Teflon tubing. A 500Â g amount of crude extract containing salicin at 13.5% was separated yielding 63.5Â g of salicin at 95.3% purity in 20Â h using methyl tert-butyl ether-1-butanol (1:3) saturated by methanol-water (1:5) as a stationary phase and methanol-water (1:5) saturated by methyl tert-butyl ether-1-butanol (1:3) as a mobile phase. A 400Â g amount of crude extract containing amygdalin at 55.3% was isolated to yield 221.2Â g of amygdalin at 94.1% purity in 19Â h using ethyl acetate-1-butanol (1:2) saturated by water as a stationary phase and water saturated by ethyl acetate-1-butanol (1:2) as a mobile phase. The flow rate of the mobile phase was 50Â ml/min. The results show that industrial SRCCC separation of salicin and amygdalin is feasible using a larger column at a higher flow rate of the mobile phase.
Keywords
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Qizhen Du, Gerold Jerz, Yangchun He, Lei Li, Yuanjin Xu, Qi Zhang, Qunxiong Zheng, Peter Winterhalter, Yoichiro Ito,