Investigating the structure of active ingredients, such as agrochemicals and their associated metabolites, is a crucial requisite in the discovery and development of these molecules. In this study, structural characterization by electron-induced dissociation (EID) was compared to collisionally activated dissociation (CAD) on a series of agrochemicals. EID fragmentation produced a greater variety of fragment ions and complementary ion pairs leading to more complete functional group characterization compared to CAD. The results obtained displayed many more cross-ring fragmentation of the pyrimidine ring compared to the pyridine ring. Compounds that consisted of one aromatic heterocyclic moiety (azoxystrobin, fluazifop acid, fluazifop-p-butyl, and pirimiphos-methyl) displayed cross-ring fragmentation while compounds with only aromatic hydrocarbon rings (fenpropidin and S-metolachlor) displayed no cross-ring fragmentation. The advantages of high-resolution accurate mass spectrometry (HRAM MS) are shown with the majority of assignments at ppb range error values and the ability to differentiate ions with the same nominal mass but different elemental composition. This highlights the potential for HRAM MS and EID to be used as a tool for structural characterization of small molecules with a wide variety of functional groups and structural motifs.
Analysis of agrochemicals in an environmental matrix is challenging because these samples contain multiple agrochemicals, their metabolites, degradation products, and endogenous compounds. The analysis of such complex samples is achieved using chromatographic separation techniques coupled to mass spectrometry. Herein, we demonstrate a two-dimensional mass spectrometry (2DMS) technique on a 12 T Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometer that can analyze a mixture of agrochemicals without using chromatography or quadrupole isolation in a single experiment. The resulting 2DMS contour plot contains abundant tandem MS information for each component in the sample and correlates product ions to their corresponding precursor ions. Two different fragmentation methods are employed, infrared multiphoton dissociation (IRMPD) and electron-induced dissociation (EID), with 2DMS to analyze the mixture of singly charged agrochemicals. The product ions of one of the agrochemicals, pirimiphos-methyl, present in the sample was used to internally calibrate the entire 2DMS spectrum, achieving sub part per million (ppm) to part per billion (ppb) mass accuracies for all species analyzed. The work described in this study will show the advantages of the 2DMS approach, by grouping species with common fragments/core structure and mutual functional groups, using precursor lines and neutral loss lines. In addition, the rich spectral information obtained from IRMPD and EID 2DMS contour plots can accurately identify and characterize agrochemicals.
Ultraviolet photodissociation (UVPD) has been shown to produce extensive structurally informative data for a variety of chemically diverse compounds. Herein, we demonstrate the performance of the 193 nm UVPD fragmentation technique on structural/moiety characterization of 14 singly charged agrochemicals. Two-dimensional mass spectrometry (2DMS) using infrared multiphoton dissociation (IRMPD) and electron-induced dissociation (EID) have previously been applied to a select range of singly charged pesticides. The ≥80% moiety coverage achieved for the majority of the species by the UVPD and 2D-UVPD methods was on par with and, in some cases, superior to the data obtained by other fragmentation techniques in previous studies, demonstrating that UVPD is viable for these types of species. A three-dimensional (3D) peak picking method was implemented to extract the data from the 2DMS spectrum, overcoming the limitations of the line extraction method used in previous studies, successfully separating precursor specific fragments with milli-Dalton accuracy. Whole spectrum internal calibration combined with 3D peak picking obtained sub-part-per-million (ppm) to part-per-billion (ppb) mass accuracies across the entire 2DMS spectrum.
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