Chemical standards for positive ion mode electrospray ionization ion mobility spectrometry/mass spectrometry (ESI(+)-IMS/MS) are suggested. The low clustering tendency of tetraalkylammonium halides makes them ideal chemical standards for ESI(+)-IMS/MS. A homologous series of these compounds forms a useful external standard for instrument testing and resolution calibration of an IMS instrument. Selected homologues or a mixture of tetraalkylammonium halides can be used as mobility standards in the analytical runs. Absolute and relative reduced mobilities were calculated for C2--C8, C10 and C12 tetraalkylammonium halides. Absolute reduced mobilities in nitrogen were 1.88, 1.56, 1.33, 1.15, 1.02, 0.92, 0.84, 0.73, and 0.67 cm2 V(-1) s(-1), for C2--C8, C10 and C12 tetraalkylammonium halides, respectively. Relative reduced mobilities (relative to 2,6-di-tert-butylpyridine) for the same compounds were 1.20, 1.00, 0.855, 0.743, 0.658, 0.59, 0.54, 0.47, and 0.43, respectively.
At the beginning of the age of laser-ionisation mass spectrometry (LIMS) increasing numbers of publications were observed. However, later the method began to run into obstacles associated with poor reproducibility of analysis and large variations in elemental sensitivities so that the wide interest of the scientific community in the method faded away. However, the results described here show that the current knowledge of laser plasma processes, together with modern technical solutions to ion separation and quantification with time-of-flight (ToF) mass spectrometry, allow one to overcome the above-mentioned obstacles in LIMS. Thus, the performance in direct-sampling solid analysis demonstrated by the LAMAS-10M instrument is similar to that typically obtained by laser ablation/inductively-coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) and glow-discharge mass spectrometry (GD-MS) methods. At the same time, there are additional advantages, including compactness of the instrument, absence of the need for expensive consumables and freedom from mass line interferences. Direct-sampling elemental LIMS is discussed as a promising alternative to LA-ICP-MS and GD-MS. Existing and prospective approaches to designing direct-sampling laser-ionisation mass spectrometers are theoretically justified. Factors affecting the main performance criteria, such as reproducibility, correctness, variations of relative sensitivity factors, linear dynamic range and resolution are considered. The demonstrated reproducibility, resolution, low-ppb limit of detection and one order-of-magnitude variation in elemental sensitivity are not the limit for direct-sampling laser-ionisation mass spectrometry of solid samples. Ways of improving LI-ToF-MS instrumental performance are discussed and theoretically justified.
An ion mobility spectrometer that can easily be installed as an intermediate component between a commercial triple-quadrupole mass spectrometer and its original atmospheric pressure ionization (API) sources was developed. The curtain gas from the mass spectrometer is also used as the ion mobility spectrometer drift gas. The design of the ion mobility spectrometer allows reasonably fast installation (about 1 h), and thus the ion mobility spectrometer can be considered as an accessory of the mass spectrometer. The ion mobility spectrometer module can also be used as an independently operated device when equipped with a Faraday cup detector. The drift tube of the ion mobility spectrometer module consists of inlet, desolvation, drift, and extraction regions. The desolvation, drift and extraction regions are separated by ion gates. The inlet region has the shape of a stainless steel cup equipped with a small orifice. Ion mobility spectrometer drift gas is introduced through a curtain gas line from an original flange of the mass spectrometer. After passing through the drift tube, the drift gas serves as a curtain gas for the ion-sampling orifice of the ion mobility spectrometer before entering the ion source. Counterflow of the drift gas improves evaporation of the solvent from the electrosprayed sample. Drift gas is pumped away from the ion source through the original exhaust orifice of the ion source. Initial characterization of the ion mobility spectrometer device includes determination of resolving power values for a selected set of test compounds, separation of a simple mixture, and comparison of the sensitivity of the electrospray ionization ion mobility spectrometry/mass spectrometry (ESI-IMS/MS) mode with that of the ESI-MS mode. A resolving power of 80 was measured for 2,6-di-tert-butylpyridine in a 333 V/cm drift field at room temperature and with a 0.2 ms ion gate opening time. The resolving power was shown to be dependent on drift gas flow rate for all studied ion gate opening times. Resolving power improved as the drift gas flow increased, e.g. at a 0.5 ms gate opening time, a resolving power of 31 was obtained with a 0.65 L/min flow rate and 47 with a 1.3 L/min flow rate for tetrabutylammonium iodide. The measured limits of detection with ESI-MS and with ESI-IMS/MS modes were similar, demonstrating that signal losses in the IMS device are minimal when it is operated in a continuous flow mode. Based on these preliminary results, the IMS/MS instrument is anticipated to have potential for fast screening analysis that can be applied, for example, in environmental and drug analysis.
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