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Significance of Competitive Reactions in an Atmospheric Pressure Chemical Ionization Ion Source: Effect of Solvent.

Younes ValadbeigiTim J Causon
Published in: Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry (2022)
Ionization of organic compounds with different structural and energetic properties including benzene derivatives, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), ketones, and polyenes was studied using a commercial atmospheric pressure corona discharge (APCI) ion source on a drift tube ion mobility-quadrupole-time-of-flight mass spectrometer (IM-QTOFMS). It was found that the studied cohort of compounds can be experimentally ionized via protonation, charge transfer, and hydride abstraction leading to formation of [M + H] + , [M] +• , and [M - H] + species, respectively. By experimentally monitoring the product ions and comparing the thermodynamic data for different ionization paths, it was proposed that NO + is one of the main reactant ions (RIs) in the ion source used. Of particular focus in this work were theoretical and experimental studies of the effect of solvents frequently used for analytical applications with this ion source (acetonitrile, methanol, and chloroform) on the ionization mechanisms. In methanol, the studied compounds were observed to be ionized mainly via proton transfer while acetonitrile suppressed the protonation of compounds and enhanced their ionization via charge transfer and hydride abstraction. Use of chloroform as a solvent led to formation of CHCl 2 + as an alternative reactant ion (RI) to ionize the analytes via electrophilic substitution. Density functional theory (DFT) was used to study the different paths of ionization. The theoretical and experimental results showed that by using only the absolute thermodynamic data, the real ionization path cannot be determined and the energies of all competing processes such as charge transfer, protonation, and hydride abstraction need to be compared.
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