Two corrections to the equation used in the cross-sectional areas by Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance ("CRAFTI") technique are identified. In CRAFTI, ion collision cross-sections are obtained from the pressure-dependent ion linewidths in Fourier transform mass spectra. The effects of these corrections on the accuracy of the cross-sections obtained using the CRAFTI technique are evaluated experimentally using the 20 biogenic amino acids and several crown ether complexes with protonated alkyl monoamines. Good absolute agreement is obtained between the CRAFTI cross-sections and the corresponding cross-sections obtained using both static drift ion mobility spectrometry and computational simulations. These results indicate that the CRAFTI cross-sections obtained using the updated equation presented here are quantitatively descriptive of the size and shape of the gas-phase ions. Cross-sections that differ by less than 3% are measured for the isobaric isomers n-butylamine and tert-butylamine complexed with the crown ethers. This level of precision is similar to what has been achieved previously using traveling wave ion mobility devices. These results indicate that CRAFTI can be used to probe subtle structural differences between ions with approximately the same precision as that achieved in traveling wave ion mobility devices. Graphical Abstract ᅟ.
Image charge detection is the foundation of charge detection mass spectrometry (CDMS). The mass-to-charge ratio, m/z, of a highly charged ion or particle is determined by measuring the particle's charge and velocity. Charge is typically determined from a calibrated image charge signal, and the particle velocity is calculated using the peaks from the shaped signal as they relate to the particle position and time-of-flight through a detector of known length. Although much has been done to improve the charge accuracy in CDMS, little has been done to address the inconsistencies in the particle velocity measurements and the interpretation of peak position and effective electrode length. In this work, we combine SIMION ion trajectory software and the Shockley−Ramo theorem to accurately determine the effective electrode length, peak position, and shape of the signal peaks. Six model charge detector geometries were examined with this method and evaluated in laboratory experiments. Experimental results in all cases agreed with the simulations. Using a charge detector with multiple, 12.7 mm-long cylindrical electrodes, experimental velocities across and between electrodes agreed within 0.25% relative standard deviation (RSD) when this method was used to correct for effective electrode lengths, corresponding to an uncertainty in the effective electrode length of only 40 μm. For a detector with multiple electrodes and varied electrode spacing, experiments showed that the peak amplitude and shape vary with the geometry and with the particle path through the detector, whereas all peak areas agreed to within 2.3% RSD. For a charge detector made of two printed circuit boards, the velocities agreed within 0.44% RSD using the calculated effective electrode length.
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