29 research outputs found

    Negative ions of ethylene sulfite

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    The formation of negative ions in molecular beams of ethylene sulfite (ES, alternately called glycol sulfite or ethylene glycol, C2H4SO3) molecules has been studied using both Rydberg electron transfer (RET) and free electron attachment methods. RET experiments with jet-cooled ES show an unexpected broad profile of anion formation as a function of the effective quantum number (n*) of the excited rubidium atoms, with peaks at nmax*∼13.5 and 16.8. The peak at nmax*∼16.8 corresponds to an expected dipole-bound anion with an electron binding energy of 8.5 meV. It is speculated that the peak at nmax*∼13.5 derives from the formation of a distorted C2H4SO3- ion. We suggest that quasifree electron attachment promotes the breaking of one ring bond giving a long-lived acyclic anion and term this process incomplete dissociative electron attachment. Theoretical calculations of plausible ionic structures are presented and discussed. Electron beam studies of ES reveal the presence of multiple dissociative attachment channels, with the dominant fragment, SO2-, peaking at 1.3 eV and much weaker signals due to SO3-, SO-, and (ES-H)- peaking at 1.5, 1.7, and 0.9 eV, respectively. All of these products appear to originate from a broad temporary negative ion resonance centered at ∼1.4 eV. © 2005 American Institute of Physics

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    Four decades of joy in mass spectrometry

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    Tremendous developments in mass spectrometry have taken place in the last 40 years. This holds for both the science and the instrumental revolutions in this field. In chemistry the research was heavily focused on organic molecules that upon electron ionization fragmented via complex mechanistic pathways as shown by isotopic labeling experiments. These studies, including ion structure determinations, were performed with use of double focusing mass spectrometers of both conventional and reversed geometry, and equipped with various types of metastable ion scanning and collision-induced dissociation techniques developed by physical and analytical chemists. Time-resolved mass spectrometry by use of the field ionization kinetics method, developed by physical chemists, was another powerful way to unravel details of unimolecular gas phase ion dissociations. Then the development of new ionization methods, such as desorption chemical ionization, field desorption, and fast atom bombardment permitted not only to analyze unvolatile, thermally labile and higher molecular weight compounds, but also to study their chemical behavior in the gas phase, initially with use of double focusing instruments and later on with multisector and hybrid mass spectrometers. These ionization methods also enabled to study organometallic compounds and increasingly the field of medium-sized to large biomolecules, the latter being exploded in the last decade by the development of electrospray- and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization/time-of-flight mass spectrometry. Another area of research concerned the bimolecular chemistry of organic ions with organic molecules in the gas phase. Initially this was performed with use of among others drift-cell ion cyclotron resonance spectroscopy, that later on was replaced by the developed method of ion trapping and Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance. Combination of the latter with the afore-mentioned ionization methods has shifted also in this case the research on organic molecules to organometallic/inorganic systems, and predominantly to biomolecules in the last decade. This invited review will describe the research efforts made by the author's group over the last 40 years together with some personal experiences during his career
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