Charge Detection Mass Spectrometry for Megadalton Polymer Characterization and Measurement of Electrospray-Generated Charged Droplet Dynamics with a New "Direct Visualization of the Rayleigh Limit" Approach to Aid in m / z Calibration.
David HrabovskyBérengère ArgenceDenis LesagePhilippe ColombyMichel SurugueRichard B ColePublished in: Analytical chemistry (2024)
A charge detector has been constructed and mounted inside the vacuum housing of a commercial mass spectrometer (Micromass-Waters Quattro I, Waters Corp., Manchester, UK). The in-house built single-pass charge detector is composed of a designed, complete electronics system that includes a low-noise charge amplifier. Communication to the data acquisition system was enabled, and analog and digital filters were devised, followed by their tuning and programming. Data treatment scripts for data analysis and plotting were automated, and the assembled system was calibrated and tested. The instrument has an acquisition speed of ∼200 detection events/s, and it permits detection down to ∼510 charges (= three times RMS noise) for a single measured particle. The charge detector was employed to determine the oligomer distribution of a megadalton polymer, polyethylene glycol (PEG). The PEG size distribution exhibits a maximum at ∼ m / z 5910 with the oligomeric population mass distribution peaking near 4.45 MDa. In studies of methanol droplet dynamics, "charge vs time-of-flight" plots enabled clear visualization of the zone near the Rayleigh limit to droplet charging. The highest population of methanol droplets near the Rayleigh limit carried 5000-7000 charges. This corresponds to droplet weights of 10-20 GDa, with the high-end tail extending above 70 GDa. This visualization of the most highly charged droplets (that bear numbers of charges near those defined by the Rayleigh equation) was exploited as a calibration aid for our charge detector, which lacks a means of precisely defining ion energy. A maximum m / z error of -12.3% was calculated for the method, i.e., less than the potential error in assigning the true level of charging of the most highly charged droplets relative to the Rayleigh limit. With these limitations in mind, the introduced method will provide a new means for aiding the calibration of m / z values in charge detectors.
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