OMS Letter ## Dear Sir Survivor Ion Mass Spectrometry Differentiation of valence-bond isomers and stereoisomers has been a pivotal topic in mass spectrometry, and various tandem mass spectrometric methods have been developed to distinguish isomers through their ionic' or neutral' dissociations. I
Fingerprinting stereoisomers by survivor-ion mass spectrometry
✍ Scribed by Ming Gu; Frantisek Turecek
- Book ID
- 102560371
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 464 KB
- Volume
- 29
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1076-5174
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Survivor‐ion mass spectrometry is used to distinguish stereoisomeric cis‐ and trans‐4‐methylcyclohexanol. The method involves producing ions by electron impact ionization and submitting them without mass selection to collisional neutralization and reionization, followed by selective monitoring of non‐dissociating ions. The differences in the electron impact mass spectra of the stereoisomers, due to the different fragment ion elemental compositions and structures, are highlighted by collisional neutralization with Xe, NO and CH~3~SSCH~3~, followed by reionization with oxygen. The differences in the survivor‐ion spectra are due to different neutralization efficiencies of the isobaric and isomeric ions produced by electron impact ionization, different stabilities of the intermediate neutral species, different reionization efficiencies and reionized ion stabilities. Neutralization‐reionization spectra of the C~7~H~12~^+.^, C~6~H~9~^+^, C~3~H~6~O^+.^ and C~3~H~5~O^+^ ions from stereoisomeric 4‐methylcyclohexanols are also reported.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Survivor-ion mass spectrometry is a method that relies on the selective monitoring of non-dissociating ions that underwent collisional neutralization and reionization. These charge-permutation processes are found to modulate the relative intensities of precursor ions, both molecular ions and fragmen