Title: Mass Spectrometry
1Mass Spectrometry
2First Steps 19th Century
- J.J Thompson was investigating the kanal strahlen
from cathode tubes positive ions formed from
residual gas in the tube - He used channels in plates to focus the stream
and demonstrated that the beam could be deflected
by both magnetic and electrostatic fields - Device was used to shown that there were two
isotopes of neon
3Uses of Mass Spectrometry
- Molecular weight determination
- Molecular formula determination
- Low resolution methods
- High resolution methods
- Structure analysis fragmentation
- Heavy isotope incorporation studies
- Sequence determination in biopolymers
- Analysis of geological materials
- Atomic physics, physical chemistry
4Block Diagram of the Instrument
5Fragmentation
The instrument is designed to accelerate and
analyze only positively charged ions (repeller
plates are positively charged). These ions are
detected using one of several detectors
(photographic plate, electron multiplier, etc).
The basic equation assumes that only singly
charged pieces are accelerated and detected, so
the units are m/z or mass /charge ratio.
6Mass Spectrum
Base peak
Fragment ions
Molecular ion peak
7Ionization Methods
- Electron impact ionization (EI)
- Use high energy electrons to dislodge an electron
from a molecule to create a molecular ion (50
-100V) - Chemical ionization (CI) (soft ionization)
- Use gas molecules (ammonia, methane) to promote
ionization - Atmospheric Pressure Ionization (API)
- Desorption ionization (LD, MALDI, FAB)
- Use energetic source to both vaporize and ionize
a large molecule with a very low vapor pressure
8Ionization Methods
9Electron Impact Ionization
10Mass Analyzers
- Time of Flight (TOF)
- Sector Fields
- Magnetic
- Electrical
- Double focusing
- Quadrupoles
- Ion traps
- Quadrupole ion trap (QIT)
- Ion cyclotron resonance (ICR)
11Quadrupole Mass Analyzer
12(No Transcript)
13Agilent Quadrupole GC-MS
Quadrupole Analyzer
GC
14Ion Trap Procedure
15Ion Trap Mass Analyzer
16Griffin Instruments Model 300CIT Instrument
17Basic Fragmentation Patterns
18Mass Spectral Peak Interpretation
19Mass Spectral Interpretation
20Mass Spectral Interpretation
21Halogen Containing Compounds
22Odd Molecular Weight - Nitrogen
23Bromine Compounds
24Information Obtained from MS
- The exact mass of an analyte
- The molecular formula of the analyte by using the
exact MW (six SFs) and Beynons Table. - The presence of certain functional groups or
characteristic chemical segments - m/z 43 (methyl ketone or similar compound)
- m/z 91 (tropylium ion methyl benzene)
- Match total spectrum to mass spec database of
fragmentation patterns (NIST Database of 200,000
compounds)
25How Do You Use MS Data
- Look for molecular ion (M?) and try to get a
molecular weight - Look at the exact mass and use tabular data to
obtain a potential molecular formula - Look for the presence of common fragment ions
do they fit other data? - Look for the presence of halogens
- Look at neutral fragments that would be lost
between two peaks