Tuning the Internal Energy of Ions Produced by Atmospheric and High-Pressure Electrospray by Modulating the Gas Throughput into the First Vacuum Stage.
Daiki AsakawaKazumi SaikusaHajime YoshidaZhongbao HanLee Chuin ChenPublished in: Analytical chemistry (2024)
In a high-pressure environment, electrospray ionization (ESI) can be achieved without discharge between the emitter and the counter electrode, thus enabling the generation of gas-phase ions from liquid with high surface tension, such as pure water, which requires a high onset voltage for stable ESI. In this study, the ion dissociation during the transferring of ions/charged droplets from a superatmospheric pressure environment to vacuum has been systematically investigated using benzyl ammonium thermometer ions. The ion source pressure did not affect the internal energy distribution of ions, whereas the gas throughput into the first vacuum stage clearly influences the internal energy distribution of the ions. The increase in the gas throughput increased the density of molecules/atoms presented in ion transfer/focusing electrodes located in the first vacuum stage. As a result, the mean free path of ions in the first vacuum stage decreases, and the energy of ions decreases by decreasing the kinetic energy involved in each collision between ions and residue gas. The gas throughput into the first vacuum stage is found to describe the internal energy distribution of ions associated with the local conditions more quantitatively instead of using the measured pressure of the vacuum stage, which is different from the effective local pressure. This study also demonstrated the controlled dissociation of ions using the ion transfer settings of the instrument in combination with ion inlet tubes of different sizes.