mass spectrometry

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Mass Spectrometry Mass spectrometry involves ionizing a compound, separating the ions that result on the basis of mass to charge ratio (m/z) and obtaining a plot of number of ions (abundance) versus m/z.

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Mass Spectrometry. Mass spectrometry involves ionizing a compound, separating the ions that result on the basis of mass to charge ratio (m/z) and obtaining a plot of number of ions (abundance) versus m/z. Example Mass Spectrum. Ionization Methods. EI = Electron Impact. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Mass Spectrometry

Mass SpectrometryMass spectrometry involves ionizing a compound, separating the ions that result on the basis of mass to charge ratio (m/z) and obtaining a plot of number of ions (abundance) versus m/z.

Page 2: Mass Spectrometry

Example Mass Spectrum

Page 3: Mass Spectrometry

Ionization Methods

Page 4: Mass Spectrometry

EI = Electron ImpactVapor-phase sample molecules are bombarded with high energy electrons (70 eV). This causes the sample molecules to eject an electron forming a radical cation.

Ionization potential of typical compound < 15 eV. Therefore, extensive bond breaking occurs resulting in smaller cations and radicals.

Page 5: Mass Spectrometry

Example of EI MS

Page 6: Mass Spectrometry

CI = Chemical IonizationChemical ionization is a “soft” ionization method. Much less bond breaking occurs than in EI.

Vapor phase sample molecules are mixed with a reagent gas such as CH4, or NH3. The reagent gas molecules are ionized by electron impact and then the resulting molecular ions of the reagent gas molecules react with the sample molecules.

R + e R+. + 2e R+. + RH RH+ + R.

RH+ + S SH+ + R RH+ + S RSH+

(R = reagent, S = sample, e = electron, . = radical electron , H = hydrogen):

SH+ iis the sample molecule plus one proton – m/z = M+1It is not a radical-cation (it is an even-electron species) and was not produced by excess ionizing voltage. It remains relatively intact – does not fragment.

Page 7: Mass Spectrometry

Example of CI MS

Page 8: Mass Spectrometry

FAB = Fast Atom BombardmentUses high-energy (6-10keV) Xe or Ar atoms to bombard samples dissolved in a high-boiling liquid (“matrix” often glycerol). Results in protonated sample molecules (MH+) with little fragmentation. Also see peaks due to matrix ionization and subsequent reactions. Useful for high MW compounds that will not work under CI or EI conditions.

FD = Field Desorption

Carbon microneedles on the surface of a metal emitter with which sample molecules come in contact. High voltage gradients at the tips of the microneedles remove an electron from the sample molecule which is repelled away from the emitter. Molecular ions with little excess energy are generated.

Page 9: Mass Spectrometry

Example of FD MS

Page 10: Mass Spectrometry

ES = Electrospray

Page 11: Mass Spectrometry

ES MS of a Protein

Page 12: Mass Spectrometry

Ionization Methods Summary

Page 13: Mass Spectrometry

Ion Separation Methods

Page 14: Mass Spectrometry

Rotating Sector

Page 15: Mass Spectrometry

Quadrupole

Page 16: Mass Spectrometry

Ion Trap

http://www.chm.bris.ac.uk/ms/theory/qit-massspec.html

Page 17: Mass Spectrometry

Summary of Mass Analyzers

http://masspec.scripps.edu/information/intro/chapter3.html

Page 18: Mass Spectrometry

High Resolution - HR MS

• Determination of exact mass using HR MS has mostly supplanted combustion analysis as a way of proving molecular formula for new compounds.

Selenium 79.916250

Page 19: Mass Spectrometry

PhMe2Si

Ts

SePh

HRMS FAB+ = 542.1203

Example