Title: Analysis of Organic Mass Spectral Data
1Analysis of Organic Mass Spectral Data
- Bioanalytical Chemistry
- Lecture Topic 3
2Mass Spectrum
- X - axis m/z
- mass - based on 12C ? 12.0000
- Z charge on ion
- Y - axis relative abundance
- usually normalized wrt largest line (base peak)
- 0 - 100
3Major Steps in Analysis of Mass Spectral Data
- Identification of molecular ion
- Base peak
- Examination of isotopic distribution pattern
- Negative information
- Determine elemental composition
- Analysis of fragmentation pattern
- Propose possible structures
- Compare postulated species to available reference
spectra
4Molecular Ion
- Ion whose mass equals that calculated from the
molecular formula using the masses for each
element which have the highest natural abundance
often tallest peak in highest m/z group - Base peak - most intense peak in spectrum not
necessarily the molecular ion peak!
5Example Mass Spectrum of Methanol (CH3OH)
CH3OH e- ? CH3OH? 2e-CH3OH ? ? CH2OH
H? CH3OH ? ? CH3 ?OHCH2OH ? H2 CHO
6Example 2 Mass spectra for cyclophosphamide
- Method of sample ionization may change molecular
ion - EI M ?
- CI MH
Figure taken from Rubinson, K.A. Chemical
Analysis Boston Little, Brown, 1987.
7Lessons
- Single charge (1) most common so m/z usually
equates to mass (EI/CI) - Ions may fragment
- EX CH3OH loses H readily
- Observe CH3O ?
8Example Mass Spectrum of Methanol (CH3OH)
CH3OH e- ? CH3OH? 2e-CH3OH ? ? CH2OH
H? CH3OH ? ? CH3 ?OHCH2OH ? H2 CHO
9Isotopes
- Most abundant isotope of an element is set to
100 - Abundance of other isotopes are normalized with
respect to it
103 Classes of Isotopes
- A - only a single isotope
- EX F, P, I
- A1 - two isotopes with significant relative
abundance differing by 1 mass unit - EX H, C, N
- A2 - two isotopes with significant relative
abundance differing by 2 mass units - EX Cl, S, O
11Natural Isotopic Abundance of Common Elements in
Organic Compounds
A
12Natural Isotopic Abundance of Common Elements in
Organic Compounds
A1
A2
13Natural Isotopic Abundance of Common Elements in
Organic Compounds
A2
14Isotopes
- Most abundant isotope of an element is set to
100 - Abundance of other isotopes are normalized with
respect to it
15Isotopic Distribution Patterns
- If Cl- present then two peaks with ratio 10032.5
16Question
- What Will the Mass Spectrum of Cl2 Look Like?
(Relative Abundance and m/z for all species)
17Cl2 Revisited
- Two isotopes 35Cl and 37Cl
- Three possible species formed 35Cl35Cl,
37Cl35Cl, and 37Cl37Cl - Relative abundance
- 35Cl35Cl 1.0 x 1.0 1.0
- 37Cl35Cl and 35Cl37Cl 1.0 x 0.325 0.325 each
or 0.66 - 37Cl37Cl 0.325 x 0.325 0.106
- So, answer 3 peaks at 70, 72, and 74 with
relative intensities of 100, 66, and 10.6
18Problem 1
19Step 1 Identify Molecular Ion
?
?
20Step 2 Normalize Intensity wrt Molecular Ion
A 2
Q Doespattern lookfamiliar?
A 2
A 2
21Step 3 Identify Possible Species
- 84 - 2(35) 14
- Remaining species must be A-type (C, H, etc)
- 14 - 12 2
- Suggests 2H, 1 C, and 2 Cl ?CH2Cl2
22Step 3 Identify Possible Species (contd)
Q Doespattern lookfamiliar?
A2
A2
23Step 3 Identify Possible Species
- 49 - (35) 14
- Remaining species must be A-type (C, H, etc.)
- 14 - 12 2
- Suggests 2H, 1 C, and 1 Cl ?CH2Cl
24Problem 2
25Solution
- Identify M as 62 and (M2) as 64
- 62-35 27
- 27-(212) 3
- so CH2CHCl (vinyl chloride)
26General Characteristics
- Saturated hydrocarbons - regularly spaced
clusters separated by 14 mass units - Branching causes breaks in the intensity envelope
- Unsaturated hydrocarbons - fragments offset from
saturated hydrocarbons by -2 - See mass spec textbooks for pattern info
27Fragmentation Patterns
- Dont forget common sense what moieties can
your molecular ion lose? - Usually only one bond broken
- No common losses between 2 and 14
28Fragmentation Patterns
- Cleavage favored at branched C atoms
- Tertiary gt secondary gt primary
- Positive charge on branched C (carbonium ion)
- Ring compounds have strong parent ions
- Intensity related to stability of ring
- Compounds with carbonyl break at this group
- m/z 16 large for primary amines (tables)
29Common Mass Spec Fragments
30Common Mass Spec Fragments
31The Nitrogen Rule
- Observation
- even mass elements have even valence
- odd mass elements have odd valence
- EX Na (11), K (19), Mg2 (12), Ca2 (20), O2-
(8) - Consequences
- compound containing C, H, O, and an even number
of nitrogens (or no nitrogens) will have an even
molecular weight - compound containing C, H, O, and an odd number of
nitrogens will have an odd molecular weight
32Problem
- Which of the following ions will appear at an
even mass number? - NH3
- C4H9N
- C2H5NH2
- C5H6N2
- ANS C5H6N2
33Problem 3
343 Classes of Isotopes
- A - only a single isotope
- EX F, P, I
- A1 - two isotopes with significant relative
abundance differing by 1 mass unit - EX H, C, N
- A2 - two isotopes with significant relative
abundance differing by 2 mass units - EX Cl, O, S
35Answer
- Compound must contain only C, H, N(A and A1
isotopes) - If N present, then Nitrogen rule says odd number
of nitrogens present - m/z 15 suggests CH3
- and 73-58 15 so m/z 58 is other piece
36Answer
- m/z 58 - 16 (NH2) 42 (C, H only)
- m/z 42 - (312) 6 consistent with C3H6
- Putting it all together, CH3CH2CH2CH2NH2
37The Numbers Approach
- If compound with formula CwHxNyOz , relative
intensities of M, M1, and M2 ions will be given
by
38The Numbers ApproachExact Masses
- Nominal mass vs. exact mass
- non integral
- EX 1H 1.00782522
- High resolution mass spectrometer
- EX ion trap MS
- can differentiate between 12C16O and (14N)2 -
0.00570 amu
39The Numbers Approach
40Problem
- A molecule containing only C, H, N and/or O, is
found to have an exact molecular mass of
203.1522. What is its molecular formula? - ANS look in table, find C10H21NO3 (n-decyl
nitrate)
41Computer Identification
- An AID for the analyst
- NOT substitute for training
- 14-36 of possible correct answers recalled with
database use
42Databases for Reference EI Data
- Wiley Registry of Mass Spectral Data (McLafferty)
- 350,000 EI spectra
- From peer-reviewed literature
- NIST (National Institute of Standards and
Technology) - Automated Mass Spectral Deconvolution and
Identification System (AMDIS) Demo - 150,000 spectra
- Each spectrum analyzed by human and compute
experts - Both contain multiple spectra representing
- Different instruments
- Different experimental conditions
43Probability Based Matching (PBM)
- Data weighting
- Large molecular fragments decompose gt
probability for higher m/z fragments lower - Reverse searching
- Are reference peaks in unknown?
44References
- McLafferty, F.W. Turecek, Frantisek
Interpretation of Mass Spectra (4th ed.)
University Science Mill Valley, 1993. - Willard, Dean, Merritt, Settle Instrumental
Methods of Analysis (6th ed.) Van Nostrand
New York, Year.
45Web References
- NIST MS Library, avail at URL
http//www.nist.gov/srd/analy.htm - NIST Chemistry WebBook, avail at URL
http//webbook.nist.gov - Analytical Sciences Digital Library (ASDL), avail
at URL www.asdlib.org