CR Chiral

Cyclodextrin-Based Enantiomeric Separations

Overview

CR Chiral columns are specialized GC capillary columns designed to separate optical isomers (enantiomers) using cyclodextrin derivative stationary phases. Under the Chrom Science & Technology brand, line of chiral phases, as CR Chiral, offering the same renowned performance with a fresh identity.

The positioning of CR Chiral columns is at the forefront of enantiomeric analysis – these are cutting-edge products for applications where stereochemistry matters (e.g., flavor/fragrance authenticity, chiral drugs purity, pesticide enantiomer separation).

With over 35 years of chiral GC development behind them, CR Chiral columns combine proven chemistry with ongoing innovation. The tone is scientific and authoritative (since chiral GC is a sophisticated niche) but also encouraging to potential users – emphasizing that Chrom Science & Technology provides expert support and a growing portfolio to tackle even the toughest chiral separations. In essence, CR Chiral columns say: “No enantiomer is too challenging – we can separate it.”

Phase Chemistries (Complete List)

CR Chiral columns are based on derivatized cyclodextrins (such as beta or gamma cyclodextrin) immobilized in a polysiloxane matrix. Each specific derivative offers unique chiral recognition capabilities. The range includes:

CR Chiral GC Columns – Phase Chemistry Comparison Table

Phase Name
Stationary Phase
Cyclodextrin Type
Tmax (°C)
Key Applications
CR-DEX DET-Beta
2,3-di-O-ethyl-6-O-tert-butyldimethylsilyl-β-cyclodextrin
β-CD
230
General chiral GC: alcohols, esters, terpenes
CR-DEX DET-Gamma
Diethyl tert-butyldimethylsilyl γ-cyclodextrin
γ-CD
230
Larger enantiomers (e.g., musks, bulky terpenoids)
CR-DEX DMP-Beta
2,3-di-O-methyl-6-O-pentyl-β-cyclodextrin
β-CD
230
Aliphatic chiral molecules, derivatized acids
CR-DEX DMT-Beta
2,3-di-O-methyl-6-O-tert-butyldimethylsilyl-β-cyclodextrin
β-CD
230
Volatile chiral analytes, fragrances
CR-DEX B-SE
Proprietary β-cyclodextrin derivative
β-CD
230
Challenging chiral separations in essential oils & pharma
CR-DEX B-03
Proprietary β-cyclodextrin, exclusive for bornyl acetate resolution
β-CD
230
Rare enantiomers like bornyl acetate
CR-DEX G-01
Special γ-cyclodextrin phase
γ-CD
250
High MW chiral analytes, essential oils
CR-DEX G-03
γ-CD optimized for chiral pesticide separations (e.g., pyrethroids)
γ-CD
250
Pesticides with enantiomer-specific regulatory profiles
  • CR-DEX DET-Beta – Phase using Diethyl tert-butyldimethylsilyl β-cyclodextrin. This is a 2,3-di-O-ethyl-6-O-tert-butyldimethylsilyl-β-CD phase. It provides broad chiral selectivity for many medium-volatility enantiomers (alcohols, esters, terpenes). T max≈ 230 °C. Great general-purpose chiral column (e.g., for flavor compounds like linalool enantiomers).
  • CR-DEX DET-GammaDiethyl tert-butyldimethylsilyl γ-cyclodextrin phase. The larger γ-cyclodextrin cavity can separate bulkier enantiomers (e.g., certain musks or larger cyclic compounds) that the β form might not. T_max ~230 °C. Often used for chiral terpenoids and some pesticides.
  • CR-DEX DMP-Beta – Phase with Dimethylpentyl-β-cyclodextrin, tert-butyldimethylsilyl protected. The 2,3-di-O-methyl-6-O-pentyl-β-CD derivative offers different selectivity, particularly for aliphatic chiral molecules and certain chiral acids (after derivatization). T_max ~230 °C.
  • CR-DEX DMT-BetaDimethyl tert-butylsilyl β-cyclodextrin phase. (Likely 2,3-di-O-methyl-6-O-tert-butyldimethylsilyl-β-CD.) This is another widely useful chiral phase, known for separating various volatile enantiomers and chiral fragrance compounds. T_max ~230 °C.
  • CR-DEX B-SE – A newer β-cyclodextrin derivative (exact substitution proprietary) geared toward certain tricky enantiomer pairs. “B-SE” likely stands for a special β-CD phase with unique substituents for enhanced separation of specific enantiomers (like those in essential oils or certain pharmaceuticals). T_max ~230 °C.
  • CR-DEX B-03 – Another innovative β-cyclodextrin phase. B-03 is unique in the market and is capable of resolving enantiomers that were previously very difficult. For instance, it is the only type of column able to separate bornyl acetate enantiomers – a feat highlighted as a market exclusive. T_max ~230 °C.
  • CR-DEX G-01γ-cyclodextrin based phase (G-01). A special γ-CD derivative developed to target specific chiral separations – possibly those relevant to fragrances or bulky molecules. Notably used in certain terpene and essential oil analyses. This column can go slightly higher in temperature (T_max ~250 °C) which is beneficial for slightly less volatile enantiomers.
  • CR-DEX G-03γ-cyclodextrin phase (G-03) optimized for chiral pesticides (pyrethroids, etc.). Developed specifically to separate enantiomers of chiral pyrethroid insecticides and similar compounds, which can be critical for regulatory reasons (since enantiomers may differ in toxicity). T_max ~250 °C.
  • (Additional offerings): The CR Chiral range is continually expanding; other phases like CR-DEX B-01, B-02 (older classics for certain amino acid derivatives, etc.) are available on request. Chrom Science & Technology can also provide Fast GC versions of these chiral phases (shorter columns for quicker analyses), denoted as needed (e.g., a 10 m fast chiral column for high-throughput GC).

Each CR Chiral phase name indicates the base cyclodextrin (B = beta, G = gamma) and a code for the substitution type. All are typically coated on a polysiloxane backbone and some are crosslinked to allow for moderate solvent rinsing (though generally chiral phases are used with caution on solvents). Film thickness and column dimensions are usually optimized per phase (often 0.25 mm ID, 0.25 µm film, 25–30 m length is standard for chiral separations, balancing resolution and analysis time).

Technical Specifications

Feature
Specification & Notes
Column Type
Fused silica capillary with polyimide outer coating
Stationary Phase
Immobilized derivatized β- or γ-cyclodextrin on polysiloxane backbone
Film Thickness Range
0.12 µm to 0.25 µm
Inner Diameter (ID)
0.25 mm standard; optional 0.32 mm for preparative applications
Length Options
10 m (Fast GC), 25 m, 30 m (standard)
Deactivation
Fully deactivated for inertness to active analytes
Crosslinking
Some phases crosslinked for increased durability; allows limited solvent flushing
Temperature Stability
Up to 230 °C (250 °C for gamma-CD derivatives)
Detection Compatibility
GC-FID (standard); GC-MS with proper conditioning
Mechanism
Enantiomeric separation by inclusion complexation
Conditioning Protocol
Ramp to 100 °C, hold 1 hr, then slowly to max temp under carrier flow
Quality Tests
Enantiomer resolution tests (racemates), plate count, baseline stability, bleed profile
Regulatory Suitability
Designed for chiral pharma, agrochemical, flavor/fragrance applications (compliant with chiral QA/QC needs)

CR Chiral columns are highly specialized: they typically operate from ambient or ~40 °C up to ~220–230 °C (most cyclodextrin phases have an upper limit around 230 °C to avoid phase degradation). They are often used with temperature programming to achieve separations within reasonable times (some complex chiral separations can take 30-60 minutes if run isothermally). The columns are shipped pre-conditioned and ready for use; however, they require gentle conditioning (e.g., 1 hour at 100 °C then slowly up to max, under carrier flow) before first use to ensure a stable baseline.

Inertness: Despite containing a carbohydrate-based stationary phase, CR Chiral columns are thoroughly deactivated and demonstrate excellent inertness for most analytes. Active hydrogen-bonding analytes (like chiral acids) often need derivatization (e.g., make esters) before GC – this is standard practice, not a column flaw. The inclusion complexation mechanism of cyclodextrins means these columns separate enantiomers by differential fit into the CD cavity – a unique mechanism different from polar/non-polar interactions of standard columns. Thus, they might not follow typical polarity patterns; instead, each CR Chiral column’s selectivity is very specific to certain structural features (e.g., aromatic ring chirality, position of substituents, etc.).

Available dimensions: Standard configurations are 25 m or 30 m × 0.25 mm ID × 0.12–0.25 µm film. Some phases might also be offered in 0.32 mm ID for preparative or larger-scale enantiomer collections, or in shorter 10 m lengths (FAST version) for quick screening (with some sacrifice in resolution). Because chiral separations often benefit from efficiency, these columns are made with high efficiency in mind (often >2000 plates per meter on test racemates). They can be connected to GC-MS systems (many chiral analyses are GC-FID, but GC-MS chiral analysis is possible; note that many cyclodextrin phases, being slightly less tightly bonded, have a bit higher bleed in MS than non-chiral columns, but CR Chiral phases are as optimized as possible in this regard).

Typical & Advanced Applications

Chiral GC columns have niche but important uses. CR Chiral columns find applications in:

Flavor, Fragrance & Essential Oils

  • Many natural flavor and fragrance compounds are chiral (limonene, carvone, linalool, etc.), and the ratio of enantiomers can determine odor or quality.
  • CR Chiral columns (like CR-DEX DMT-Beta or DET-Beta) are extensively used to authenticate natural oils (e.g., distinguishing natural vs synthetic by enantiomeric excess) and to characterize flavor mixtures.
  • For example, separating D- vs L-limonene or D- vs L-menthol is straightforward on these columns.
  • Terpene enantiomers in citrus oils or peppermint oils can be resolved to verify botanical origin.

Chiral Pesticides and Environmental Enantiomers

  • Certain pesticides (like organochlorine insecticide alpha-HCH, pyrethroids like cypermethrin) are chiral.
  • Regulatory agencies sometimes require enantiomer-specific analysis because one enantiomer may be more toxic or persistent. CR-DEX G-03 is tailored for such tasks – e.g., resolving the four cis/trans enantiomers of permethrin, or separating metalaxyl enantiomers.
  • Environmental fate studies use these columns to track how enantiomer ratios change (due to biodegradation favoring one isomer).

Pharmaceuticals & Biomedical

  • Some pharmaceuticals or their metabolites can be analyzed by GC if derivatized (e.g., as acetate or trifluoroacetyl derivatives).
  • CR Chiral columns can perform enantiomeric purity checks for chiral drugs (for instance, amino acid enantiomers as TFA derivatives, or certain amphetamine enantiomers as acetamides).
  • While HPLC is more common for chiral pharma, GC offers supreme resolution for volatile chiral molecules.
  • CR-DEX phases have been used in the analysis of profen drugs (ibuprofen enantiomers) after derivatization, and in metabolic studies to separate chiral metabolites.

Forensic and Doping control

  • Some illicit drugs and doping compounds are chiral (e.g., methamphetamine, steroids).
  • Chiral GC can identify which enantiomer is present – for example distinguishing illicit S-methamphetamine from legal L-methamphetamine in nasal inhalers.
  • CR Chiral columns (with appropriate derivatization) provide that capability.
  • Similarly, doping labs might examine steroid enantiomers to catch designer modifications.

Chemical Research

  • Researchers synthesizing new chiral molecules (e.g., chiral intermediates, flavors, or materials) often need a quick way to assess enantiomeric excess.
  • CR Chiral columns are a valuable analytical tool for this: injection of the racemate vs product can show the excess.
  • The variety of phases means one can screen multiple columns to find one that separates the particular enantiomer pair (Chrom Science & Technology offers application notes and a database of hundreds of chiral separations achieved on these phases).
  • This is especially useful in academic or QC labs dealing with asymmetric synthesis.

Performance Benefits

Benefit
Detail
High-Resolution Enantiomeric Separation
Efficiently resolves enantiomer pairs, even complex racemates like bornyl acetate or chiral musks
Specialized Selectivity
Multiple derivatized CD phases tailored to unique structural motifs (aromatic rings, bulky substituents, polar centers)
Fast GC Options
Short column formats available (e.g., 10 m) to deliver high-throughput enantiomer screening while maintaining selectivity
GC-FID & GC-MS Compatible
Adaptable across detection platforms, with stable baselines even for MS (when properly conditioned)
Reliable and Robust
Crosslinked, stable coating for long lifetime; no rapid degradation if used within specs
Application Versatility
Ideal for pharma, flavors/fragrances, agrochemicals, natural product purity, and chiral R&D
Expert Guidance
Chrom Science & Technology supports method development – choosing the right CR Chiral phase based on compound structure
Exclusive Separation Capability
Certain CR Chiral phases (e.g., B-03) achieve separations other commercial columns cannot (e.g., resolving bornyl acetate enantiomers)
Sample Protection
Minimizes risk of racemization or sample degradation due to mild temperature profiles and inert surfaces
Economical Chiral Analysis
GC-based enantiomeric separations often more cost-effective and faster than chiral HPLC – especially with FID detection

CR Chiral columns offer unmatched enantiomeric resolution in GC. The benefit of separating enantiomers by GC (as opposed to HPLC) is often significantly higher efficiency (narrower peaks) and the ability to easily interface with FID (universal response) or even mass spec for identification. These columns allow analysts to uncover chiral information in samples where it previously might have been impossible or extremely difficult. For companies in flavors/fragrances, this can literally protect against fraud (detecting unnatural enantiomer ratios); for agrochemical companies, it provides insight into which enantiomer is active; for pharma, it ensures drug safety and efficacy by monitoring chiral purity.

From a selling perspective: emphasize the breadth of the chiral range and expertise. “We’ve spent decades solving chiral puzzles so you don’t have to”. Chrom Science & Technology can guide users to the right column for their separation – a major plus since chiral method development can be daunting. This guidance and know-how is as much part of the product as the column itself. Also, highlight unique capabilities: e.g., CR-DEX B-03’s ability to separate bornyl acetate enantiomers – something no competitor does easily. These exclusive feats make the product enticing to specialists.

Furthermore, reliability: cyclodextrin columns can sometimes have reputation for shorter life, but CR Chiral columns are robust – many are crosslinked and can be rejuvenated by careful conditioning. They also often can be ordered in “Fast GC” format for those who want to speed up analyses, showing adaptability (e.g., “CR Chiral Fast columns can cut analysis time by half while maintaining resolution, enabling high-throughput screening of enantiomeric purity” – this was noted with a FAST chiral line being available). This flexibility is a persuasive benefit for labs that might need to run dozens of chiral analyses per day.

In short, the performance benefit is accurate, efficient chiral separations that empower analysts to distinguish enantiomers with confidence. Chrom Science & Technology’s CR Chiral columns bring niche separation science to the routine lab in a reliable package, effectively combining innovation and trust.

Industry Compliance & Standards

Chiral GC is a bit outside standard regulatory methods (few official pharmacopeia or EPA methods mandate GC chiral columns, since it’s specialized). However, several EN (European) standards in flavors/fragrances and certain ISO methods reference chiral GC columns. For example, ISO standards for authenticity of essential oils (like ISO 11024 for terpene analysis) often implicitly require enantiomer separation – CR Chiral columns fulfill that need. In the pharmaceutical industry, ICH guidelines require evaluation of chiral purity for chiral drugs; while it doesn’t prescribe how, a CR Chiral column could be used to meet that requirement in a GC method. They also conform to general QA standards – each CR Chiral column is individually tested with a known enantiomer pair to ensure it meets resolution specifications (often the test mix might be something like 2-phenylpropanol enantiomers or another known pair).

Chrom Science & Technology’s heritage in chiral GC means there is a wealth of validated methods and reference data. Although not “compliance” in the usual sense, it’s noteworthy that CR Chiral columns come with extensive documentation and support – e.g., a library of applications where each phase separated specific enantiomers, which can be crucial for labs developing validated methods. This means adopting a CR Chiral column is backed by proven application notes (making method development faster and more justifiable during audits or peer review). For any official methods (like some AOAC methods for flavors) that require chiral resolution, these columns are ready to deploy.

ChromScience

Get periodic updates on promos and discounts as well as new products by subscribing to our email list.

Quick Links

Contact Us