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Collisional activation spectra of organic ions

✍ Scribed by F. W. McLafferty; P. F. Bente III; Richard Kornfeld; Shih-Chuan Tsai; Ian Howe


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1995
Tongue
English
Weight
948 KB
Volume
30
Category
Article
ISSN
1076-5174

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Collision with neutral molecules is shown to provide a convenient method of adding internal energy to ions in a field‐free drift region of the mass spectrometer. The effects on this process of ion accelerating potential, target gas pressure and identity, and precursor ion internal energy and mass have been investigated to optimize experimental conditions. Such collisions cause ion decompositions whose activation energies cover a broad range; for a particular ion such decompositions can be viewed as its β€œcollisional activation (CA) spectrum.” CA spectra, which can be obtained for each ion in the normal mass spectrum, and which appear to follow the predictions of the quasi equilibrium theory, show many more of the possible unimolecular ion decomposition reactions for an ion than do unimolecular metastables, and thus provide valuable information for ion reaction mechanisms and molecular structure determination. Collisional activation can sometimes yield ion energies which are relatively inaccessible by electron impact. The precursor ion internal energy has a negligible effect on the ion's CA spectrum except for product ions formed through the processes of lowest activation energy. Thus, CA spectra should also be valuable for the characterization of ion structures.


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Collisional activation spectra. Behavior
✍ F. W. McLafferty; Ikuo Sakai πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 1973 πŸ› John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English βš– 698 KB

## Abstract Collisional activation spectra have identified (__i__) as Stable ion structures. Evidence is presented for a variety of pathway for their formation, including anchimeric assistance and hydrogen migration in less stable isomers. The fragmentation behavior of a number of [C~__n__~H~2__n__