LCMS
More information
WebinarsAbout usContact usTerms of use
LabRulez s.r.o. All rights reserved. Content available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 Attribution-ShareAlike

Cyclodextrin purification (Part 1): Method screening and overload studies

Applications |  | KNAUERInstrumentation
HPLC, Consumables, LC columns
Industries
Pharma & Biopharma, Food & Agriculture
Manufacturer
KNAUER

Summary

Significance of the Topic


Cyclodextrins are cyclic oligosaccharides capable of forming inclusion complexes with various molecules. Their unique ring structure makes them valuable in pharmaceuticals, cosmetics and food industries. Efficient purification of larger cyclodextrins (e.g., CDs with more than ten glucose units) is critical to obtaining high-purity compounds for advanced applications.

Study Objectives and Overview


This work aimed to develop and optimize an HPLC method for the separation and purification of a mixture of cyclodextrins (CD10, CD11, CD12 and minor species). An automated column screening approach was employed to identify the best stationary phase, mobile phase composition and column dimensions. Mass and volume overload studies were then performed to inform scale-up strategies.

Methodology and Instrumentation


An automated HPLC system with column switching was used to evaluate four reversed-phase columns (C18, C18H, C18A and C18P) under isocratic conditions. Key parameters included:
  • Flow rate: 0.8 mL/min
  • Column temperature: 25 °C
  • Mobile phase: 3 % methanol in water, with a gradient to 30 % for peak elution
  • Injection volumes: 50–200 µL
  • Sample concentration: 25–100 mg/mL CD mix

Mass and volume overload experiments assessed the maximum loading for baseline separation. Instrumentation details appear in the dedicated section below.

Main Results and Discussion


Screening revealed that C18 and C18H columns delivered superior resolution, while C18H provided earlier elution of target cyclodextrins. Increasing column length from 150 mm to 250 mm improved the separation factor for key peaks. A 3 % methanol mobile phase struck a balance between retention and resolution; higher methanol percentages caused coelution, and lower percentages resulted in peak broadening.
Overload studies demonstrated that up to 100 mg/mL sample concentration allowed baseline separation of CD10, CD11 and CD12. Volume injections up to 100 µL maintained resolution, whereas 200 µL led to partial overlap. These findings support preparative-scale purification on larger columns.

Benefits and Practical Applications


Automated stationary phase and mobile phase screening significantly reduces development time. The optimized method enables reliable purification of high-purity cyclodextrins (CD10–CD12) in batch processes, facilitating production for research and industrial use.

Future Trends and Opportunities


Advances may include continuous chromatographic processes, purification of even larger cyclodextrins, and exploration of cyclodextrins as chiral selectors for pharmaceutical enantiomers. Integration with process analytical technology could further enhance efficiency and quality control.

Conclusion


An HPLC method employing an automated column switching platform was optimized for cyclodextrin purification. The C18H column (250 × 4 mm, 5 µm) with 3 % methanol proved ideal for separating CD10–CD12 with high resolution. Mass and volume overload studies support scale-up to preparative applications.

Instrumentation Used


A complete HPLC setup with automated column switching valves was used, including pump, autosampler, refractive index detector and column thermostat. This configuration enabled rapid screening of stationary and mobile phase conditions.

References


  1. Martin del Valle EM. Cyclodextrins and their uses: a review. Process Biochemistry. 2003;39(9):1033–1046.
  2. Sonnendecker C, Thürmann S, Przybylski C, et al. Large-Ring Cyclodextrins as Chiral Selectors for Enantiomeric Pharmaceuticals. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2019;doi:10.1002/anie.201900911.

Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.

Downloadable PDF for viewing
 

Similar PDF

Toggle
Cyclodextrin purification (Part 2): Method transfer and purification
Science Together Cyclodextrin purification (Part 2): Method transfer and purification Yannick Krauke*, Sebastian Thürmann*, Christian Sonnendecker**, Kate Monks* – [email protected] *KNAUER Wissenschaftliche Geräte GmbH, Hegauer Weg 38, 14163 Berlin – www.knauer.net ** Fakultät für Lebenswissenschaften / Institut für Biochemie AG…
Key words
purification, purificationknauer, knauerpuritychrom, puritychromazura, azurafür, fürscale, scaleayfaeabr, ayfaeabrcyclodxtrine, cyclodxtrinelebenswissenschaften, lebenswissenschaftenfakultät, fakultätpreparative, preparativecyclodextrine, cyclodextrineglucopyranose, glucopyranosescience, sciencebiochemie
Applications Collection of solutions by KNAUER
Science Together Applications Collection of solutions by KNAUER Analytical/Preparative HPLC • FPLC • SMB • Osmometry • Sample preparation Science Together KNAUER Applications Bio sciences The scope of these applications covers a wide area of bio and life sciences tasks.…
Key words
together, togetherscience, scienceazura, azurapurification, purificationknauer, knauerinjection, injectionadditional, additionalcolumn, columneluent, eluentpump, pumprate, rateloop, loopvalve, valveflow, flowpreparative
Purify CBD and other cannabinoids by preparative HPLC
Science Together Purify CBD and other cannabinoids by preparative HPLC Yannick Krauke, Kate Monks; [email protected] KNAUER Wissenschaftliche Geräte GmbH, Hegauer Weg 38, 14163 Berlin; www.knauer.net. SUMMARY The demand of pure cannabidiol (CBD) and other cannabinoids is increasing and therefore methods…
Key words
cbd, cbdcannabinoids, cannabinoidspurify, purifypreparative, preparativeoil, oilcbl, cblcbdv, cbdvcbg, cbgloges, logescbn, cbnarea, areasample, samplescience, sciencetogether, togethereluent
Scale-Up of an analytical HPLC method for steviol glycosides to a preparative approach
Science Together Scale-Up of an analytical HPLC method for steviol glycosides to a preparative approach Johannes Menke, Yannick Krauke, Kate Monks – [email protected] KNAUER Wissenschaftliche Geräte GmbH, Hegauer Weg 38, 14163 Berlin – www.knauer.net SUMMARY Steviol glycosides are the main…
Key words
preparative, preparativeknauer, knauersteviol, steviolrebaudioside, rebaudiosideglycosides, glycosidesscale, scalestevia, steviastevioside, steviosideanalytical, analyticalscaleup, scaleupisocratic, isocraticmethod, methodhplc, hplcsimulation, simulationtogether
Other projects
GCMS
ICPMS
Follow us
More information
WebinarsAbout usContact usTerms of use
LabRulez s.r.o. All rights reserved. Content available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 Attribution-ShareAlike