Enantioselective surfactant-templated thin films were fabricated through the sol−gel (SG) process.
The enantioselectivity is general in the sense that it discriminates between pairs of enantiomers not used
for the imprinting process. The chiral cationic surfactant (−)-N-dodecyl-N-methylephedrinium bromide (1)
was used as the surfactant template, and after its extraction chiral domains were created. The chiral
discriminative feature of these films was examined by challenging with pure enantiomer solutions for
rebinding. Selective adsorption was shown using (R)- and (S)-propranolol, (R)-2 and (S)-2, respectively,
and (R)- and (S)-2,2,2-trifluoro-1-(9-anthryl)ethanol, (R)-3 and (S)-3, respectively, as the chiral probes.
The selective adsorption was measured by fluorescence analysis, and the chiral selectivity factors were
found to be 1.6 for 2 and 2.25 for 3. In both cases, (R)-enantiomer was adsorbed preferably. The resulting
material was characterized by transmission electron microscopy, by diffraction, and by surface area
measurements, and was found to be semicrystalline with short-range ordered domains (50 Å) of hexagonal
symmetry