Characterization Across a Dispersity: Polymer Mass Spectrometry in the Second Dimension.
Tomos E MorganChristopher A WoottonBryan MarzulloJohanna ParisAndrew KerrSean H EllacottMaria A van AgthovenMark P BarrowAnthony W T BristowSebastien PerrierPeter B O'ConnorPublished in: Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry (2021)
Due to the natural dispersity that is present in synthetic polymers, an added complexity is always present in the analysis of polymeric species. Tandem mass spectrometry analysis requires the isolation of individual precursors before a fragmentation event to allow the unambiguous characterization of these species and is not viable at certain levels of complexity due to achievable isolation widths. Two-dimensional mass spectrometry (2DMS) fragments ions and correlates fragments with their corresponding precursors without the need for isolation. In this study, 2DMS electron capture dissociation (ECD) fragmentation of a polyoxazoline and polyacrylamide species was carried out, resulting in the analysis of byproducts and individual polymer species without the use of chromatographic techniques. This study shows that 2DMS ECD is a powerful tool for the analysis of polyacrylamide and polyoxazoline species and offers a new dimension in the characterization of polymers.