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Solvent Adducts in Ion Mobility Spectrometry: Towards an Alternative Reaction Probe for Thermometer Ions.

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The fragmentation of benzylpyridinium "thermometer" ions is widely used to quantify the energetics of ions studied by mass spectrometry and other hyphenated techniques such as ion mobility. The reaction pathway… Click to show full abstract

The fragmentation of benzylpyridinium "thermometer" ions is widely used to quantify the energetics of ions studied by mass spectrometry and other hyphenated techniques such as ion mobility. The reaction pathway leads to a benzylium cation with the release of a neutral pyridine. Using trapped ion mobility spectrometry, we noticed that the addition of acetonitrile, present in the electrosprayed solvent mixture, could occur on some electrophilic benzylium cations. This process results in the formation of adducts and in the appearance of a supplementary mobility peak. We here demonstrate that the addition takes place both in the electrospray source and inside the mobility analyzer, thereby evidencing possible outflow of solvent vapors downstream the instrument. By further characterizing the initial kinetics and the resulting equilibrium linked with the addition reaction, we presently discuss these as alternative probes to calibrate ions temperature in the framework of ion mobility.

Keywords: spectrometry; mobility; ion mobility; reaction; thermometer ions

Journal Title: Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry
Year Published: 2020

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