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Negative Reactant Ion Formation in High Kinetic Energy Ion Mobility Spectrometry (HiKE-IMS).

Maria AllersAnsgar T KirkBennet TimkeDuygu ErdogduWalter WissdorfThorsten BenterStefan Zimmermann
Published in: Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry (2020)
Due to the operation at background pressures between 10-40 mbar and high reduced electric field strengths of up to 120 Td, the ion-molecule reactions in High Kinetic Energy Ion Mobility Spectrometers (HiKE-IMS) differ from those in classical ambient pressure IMS. In the positive ion polarity mode, the reactant ions H+(H2O)n, O2+(H2O)n, and NO+(H2O)n are observed in the HiKE-IMS. The relative abundances of these reactant ion species significantly depend on the reduced electric field strength in the reaction region, the operating pressure, and the water concentration in the reaction region. In this work, the formation of negative reactant ions in HiKE-IMS is investigated in detail. On the basis of kinetic and thermodynamic data from the literature, the processes resulting in the formation of negative reactant ions are kinetically modeled. To verify the model, we present measurements of the negative reactant ion population in the HiKE-IMS and its dependence on the reduced electric field strength as well as the water and carbon dioxide concentrations in the reaction region. The ion species underlying individual peaks in the ion mobility spectrum are identified by coupling the HiKE-IMS to a time-of-flight mass spectrometer (TOF-MS) using a simple gated interface that enables the transfer of selected peaks of the ion mobility spectrum into the TOF-MS. Both the theoretical model as well as the experimental data suggest the predominant generation of the oxygen-based ions O-, OH-, O2-, and O3- in purified air containing 70 ppmv of water and 30 ppmv of carbon dioxide. Additionally, small amounts of NO2- and CO3- are observed. Their relative abundances highly depend on the reduced electric field strength as well as the water and carbon dioxide concentration. An increase of the water concentration in the reaction region results in the generation of OH- ions, whereas increasing the carbon dioxide concentration favors the generation of CO3- ions, as expected.
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