Mass spectra of doubly charged ions
β Scribed by Michael Barber; David J. Bell; Michael Morris; Lee W. Tetler; Michael D. Woods; John J. Monaghan; William E. Morden
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1989
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 551 KB
- Volume
- 24
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1076-5174
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The mass spectra of biological molecules, whose molecular mass exceeds 10 kDa, invariably contain multiply charged ions. For example, a survey scan of a small protein will produce singly, doubly and triply protonated molecules, the intensity of the doubly charged species often being greater than that of the singly charged entity. Although the spectra resulting from doubly charged peptides have not previously been studied, collisional activation of such doubly charged species may result in significant additional information pertaining to molecular structure. The techniques employed to study ions originating from multiply charged species were linked scanning of constant B/E and tandem mass spectrometry, namely low collision energy spectra acquired on a BEQQ hybrid instrument.
The methodology was applied to model compounds whose tandem mass spectrometry characteristics are well known, e.g. gramicidin S and angiotensin I. The results for the product ions of the [M + 2H]*+ species of the models were obtained which highlight the methodology required for high-mass materiais.
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## Abstract Doubly charged ion mass spectra have been obtained for 11 organophosphorus compounds. Methane has been used as a target gas to increase the probability of single electron transfer collisions in the first fieldβfree region of an Hitachi RMUβ7L mass spectrometer. In general, the spectra o
The influence of the collision gas on doubly charged ion mass spectra of a selected number of hydrocarbons has been examined. Relative abundances of various product ions in 2E spectra, resulting from charge exchange collisions of doubly charged hydrocarbon ions, do not vary drastically as the collis