Not sure if i am posting in the right place but i looked around and thought to start here.
Can the racemic form of Ethylphenidate which i think is the l-isomer to converted into the d-isomer?
Searched and found one old topic with no answers. Thanks if anyone can answer.
EDit:
Should have been in original post. What i am doing and why i am asking question.
I have some Ethylphenidate powder and have been running basic experiments. Experiments like determining its melting point, vaporization point, and solubility (can it be dissolved and max capacity mg/ml) in water and other solvents. I tried one experiment that i did not get my intended results. I wanted to recrystallize the powder which i though should be fun and work. So i supersaturated the regent in a solution using heat (hot plate) so that the solvent would hold more in solution than it did at room temp. I I I also added a crystal seed (small crystal from Crystal EPH) to get crystals forming on the seed as i cooled the solution. What i got was the ethylphenidate formed big clumps of the powder on the seed but no crystallization.
I then began to looking to why.
I came across some sources but not sure if they are correct. They said racemic form will not crystallize it is always a powder the d-isomer is the form that can crystallize and be recrystallized from ground up crystals. This doesn't make sense to me as the information why was over my head but i will go back and try to understand it, obviously the isomers have differences so just not sure what difference causes one to be powder of crystalline.
So that is why i was hoping to synthesize the d-isomer from the l-isomer. It should be interesting and help me understand the differences and relationship that make one crystallize.
I am learning so please be patient if my jargon is wrong or im missing the big picture.
Can the racemic form of Ethylphenidate which i think is the l-isomer to converted into the d-isomer?
Searched and found one old topic with no answers. Thanks if anyone can answer.
EDit:
Should have been in original post. What i am doing and why i am asking question.
I have some Ethylphenidate powder and have been running basic experiments. Experiments like determining its melting point, vaporization point, and solubility (can it be dissolved and max capacity mg/ml) in water and other solvents. I tried one experiment that i did not get my intended results. I wanted to recrystallize the powder which i though should be fun and work. So i supersaturated the regent in a solution using heat (hot plate) so that the solvent would hold more in solution than it did at room temp. I I I also added a crystal seed (small crystal from Crystal EPH) to get crystals forming on the seed as i cooled the solution. What i got was the ethylphenidate formed big clumps of the powder on the seed but no crystallization.
I then began to looking to why.
I came across some sources but not sure if they are correct. They said racemic form will not crystallize it is always a powder the d-isomer is the form that can crystallize and be recrystallized from ground up crystals. This doesn't make sense to me as the information why was over my head but i will go back and try to understand it, obviously the isomers have differences so just not sure what difference causes one to be powder of crystalline.
So that is why i was hoping to synthesize the d-isomer from the l-isomer. It should be interesting and help me understand the differences and relationship that make one crystallize.
I am learning so please be patient if my jargon is wrong or im missing the big picture.
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