Below, I have added the PDFs for the HNMR, Chiral HPLC and HPLC results. One step closer
HNMR: https://drive.google...dit?usp=sharing
Chiral HPLC: https://drive.google...dit?usp=sharing
HPLC: https://drive.google...dit?usp=sharing
Hi guys, Dazzcat asked me to take a look at these. I tracked down the synthesis patent for EVP-6124 and related compounds, and was able to get a listing of NMR peaks. (Example 69) The spectrum that they sent us matches reasonably well, although the 3 peaks at the high end are somewhat displaced from where they were in the patent. The NMR solvent was deutero-DMSO. You can tell that by the solvent peak at 2.5 ppm. The peak at 0.0 is a standard. The peak integration shows 18 protons, so they must have run it with the quinuclidine nitrogen protonated. The most downfield peak, at 10.49 is probably that. It comes in at 10.03 in the patent, which is the most different of all the peaks. Do we know what counterion they used in the analysis? It was probably hydrochloride but they don't say. That might be the cause of the peak shifts, if it was different. (It was HCl in the patent)
The HPLC tells us that the material is 99.5% pure, and the Chiral HPLC shows a big fat single peak. This means that it's all one stereoisomer, or at least close enough that any stereoisomer impurities aren't resolved. The CHPLC doesn't show any impurities at all, which suggests that it's not that great at separating similar compounds unless they are chiral.
From this data, it looks to be of reasonable purity, and it probably is what they claim it to be.