Fragmentation, auto-modification and post ionisation proton bound dimer ion formation: the differential mobility spectrometry of low molecular weight alcohols
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journal contribution
posted on 2020-12-18, 13:46authored byDorota Ruszkiewicz, Paul Thomas, Gary Eiceman
Differential mobility spectrometry (DMS) is currently being used for environmental monitoring of space craft atmospheres and has been proposed for the rapid assessment of patients at accident and emergency receptions. Three studies investigated hitherto undescribed complexity in the DMS spectra of methanol, ethanol, propan-1-ol and butan-1-ol product ions formed from a 63Ni ionisation source. 54000 DMS spectra obtained over a concentration range of 0.01 mg m−3(g) to 1.80 g m−3(g) revealed the phenomenon of auto-modification of the product ions. This occurred when the neutral vapour concentration exceeded the level required to induce a neutral-ion collision during the low field portion of the dispersion field waveform. Further, post-ionisation cluster-ion formation or protonated monomer/proton bound dimer inter-conversion within the ion-filter was indicated by apparent shifts in the values of the protonated monomer compensation field maximum; indicative of post-ionisation conversion of the protonated monomer to a proton-bound dimer. APCI-DMS-quadrupole mass spectrometry studies enabled the ion dissociation products from dispersion-field heating to be monitored and product ion fragmentation relationships to be proposed. Methanol was not observed to dissociate, while propan-1-ol and butan-1-ol underwent dissociation reactions consistent with dehydration processes that led ultimately to the generation of what is tentatively assigned as a cyclo-C3H3+ ion (m/z 39) and hydrated protons. Studies of the interaction of ion filter temperature with dispersion-field heating of product ions isolated dissociation/fragmentation product ions that have not been previously described in DMS. The implications of these combined findings with regard to data sharing and data interpretation were highlighted.
Funding
The authors wish to thank: the Engineering and Physical
Science Research Council alongside John Hoggs Technical
Solutions for the support of D. M. Ruszkiewicz through an
Industrial Case Studentship Award.
History
School
Science
Department
Chemistry
Published in
The Analyst
Volume
141
Issue
15
Pages
4587-4598
Citation
RUSZKIEWICZ, D., THOMAS, C.L.P. and EICEMAN, G.A., 2016. Fragmentation, auto-modification and post ionisation proton bound dimer ion formation: the differential mobility spectrometry of low molecular weight alcohols. Analyst, 141 (15), pp. 4587-4598.
This work is made available according to the conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) licence. Full details of this licence are available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Acceptance date
2016-05-19
Publication date
2016-05-19
Copyright date
2016
Notes
This paper was accepted for publication in the journal Analyst and the definitive published version is available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/C6AN00435K