Mobility Resolution and Mass Analysis of Ions from Ammonia and Hydrazine Complexes with Ketones Formed in Air at Ambient Pressure

Protonated ammonia and hydrazines (MH +) form complexes with ketones and the differences in masses and mobilities of the resulting ions, MH +(ketone) n, are sufficient for separation in an ion mobility spectrometer at ambient pressure. The highest mass ion for any of the protonated molecules is obta...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry 2007-05, Vol.18 (5), p.940-951
Hauptverfasser: Bollan, H.R., Stone, J.A., Brokenshire, J.L., Rodriguez, J.E., Eiceman, G.A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Protonated ammonia and hydrazines (MH +) form complexes with ketones and the differences in masses and mobilities of the resulting ions, MH +(ketone) n, are sufficient for separation in an ion mobility spectrometer at ambient pressure. The highest mass ion for any of the protonated molecules is obtained when the ketone is present at elevated concentrations in the supporting atmosphere of both the source and drift regions of the spectrometer so that an ion maintains a discrete composition and mobility. The sizes of the ion-molecule complexes were found to depend on the number of H atoms on the protonated nitrogen atom—four for ammonia, three for hydrazine, two for monomethylhydrazine, and one for 1,1-dimethylhydrazine, and the drift times of these ions were proportional to the size of the ion-molecule complex. Unexpected side products, including protonated hydrazones and azines, and associated ketone clusters, were isolated to a single drift tube containing ceramic parts and could not, from CID studies, be attributed to gas-phase ion chemistry. These findings illustrate that mobility resolution of ions in IMS and IMS/MS experiments can be enhanced through chemical modification of the supporting gas atmosphere without changes in the core ion.
ISSN:1044-0305
1879-1123
DOI:10.1016/j.jasms.2007.01.014