| Literature DB >> 15941037 |
Qizhen Du1, Gerold Jerz, Yangchun Ha, Lei Li, Yuanjin Xu, Qi Zhang, Qunxiong Zheng, Peterb Winterhalter, Yoichiro Ito.
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 17 mm i.d. convoluted Teflon tubing. A 500g amount of crude extract containing salicin at 13.5% was separated yielding 63.5 g of salicin at 95.3% purity in 20h using methyl tert-butyl ether-l-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 400g amount of crude extract containing amygdalin at 55.3% was isolated to yield 221.2g of amygdalin at 94.1% purity in 19h 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 50 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.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15941037 DOI: 10.1016/j.chroma.2005.03.064
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Chromatogr A ISSN: 0021-9673 Impact factor: 4.759