## Abstract Six alkyl alcohols were studied using thermospray mass Spectrometry. Whereas the dominant ion in the spectrum up to a repeller potential of 120 V was [M + NH~4~]^+^, above that potential [M + H]^+^ and fragment ions appeared. The fragments observed were largely due to hydrogen release f
Mechanisms of repeller-induced effects in thermospray liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry
โ Scribed by C. E. M. Heeremans; R. A. M. van der Hoeven; W. M. A. Niessen; J. van der Greef; N. M. M. Nibbering
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 738 KB
- Volume
- 26
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1076-5174
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The application of a high potential at the repeller electrode, positioned opposite to the sampling cone in order to increase the sampling efficiency, can induce fragmentation in thermospray mass spectrometry. Until now, this fragmentation has been attributed to collision-induced dissociation. As a result of studies on the changes in the reagent gas composition in the thermospray buffer ionization mode as a function of the repeller potential in the positive-ion mode, it appears that three different processes are occurring. At low repeller potentials, the thermospray mass spectra of the eluent are determined by the proton affinities and the concentrations of the various solvent constituents, and the stabilities of the formed cluster ions under the ion source conditions. With an increase in the repeller potential, collision-induced dissociation of the background ions starts to occur. When the kinetic energy of the ions and cluster ions becomes high enough, endothermic proton transfer and solvent-switching reaction pathways are opened. For the relatively volatile analytes studied, e.g. aniline, acetophenone, benzaldehyde and benzoic acid, similar effects are observed.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Thermospray liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry using a double-focusing magnetic sector mass spectrometer has been studied. The quality of the thermospray mass spectra were often a function of the solvent mixture used, and use of gradients affected the quality of some thermospray mass spectra. H
Various esters of choline and carnitine have been shown to undergo fragmentation dependent on both the structures of the molecules and the vapor and block temperatures when subjected to thermospray ionization mass spectrometry. The fragments observed vary with the structure of tbe ester portion and