1 research outputs found
Development of an Atmospheric Pressure Ion Mobility Spectrometer–Mass Spectrometer with an Orthogonal Acceleration Electrostatic Sector TOF Mass Analyzer
Recently
developed ion mobility mass spectrometer is described.
The instrument is based on a drift tube ion mobility spectrometer
and an orthogonal acceleration electrostatic sector time-of-flight
mass analyzer. Data collection is performed using a specially developed
fast ADC-based recorder that allows real-time data integration in
an interval between 3 and 100 s. Primary tests were done with positive
ion electrospray. The tests have shown obtaining 100 ion mobility
resolving power and 2000 mass resolving power. Obtained for 2,6-di-<i>tert</i>-butylpyridine in electrosprayed liquid samples during
100 s analysis and full IMS/MS data collection mode were 4 nM relative
limits of detection and a 1 pg absolute limit of detection (S/N=3).
Characteristic ion mobility/mass distributions were recorded for selected
antibiotics, including amoxicillin, ampicillin, lomefloxacin, and
ofloxacin. At studied conditions, lomefloxacin forms only a protonated
molecule-producing reduced ion mobility peak at 1.082 cm<sup>2</sup>/(V s). Both amoxicillin and ampicillin produce [M + H]<sup>+</sup>, [M + CH<sub>3</sub>OH + H]<sup>+</sup>, and [M + CH<sub>3</sub>CN + H]<sup>+</sup>. Amoxicillin shows two peaks at 0.909 cm<sup>2</sup>/(V s) and 0.905 cm<sup>2</sup>/(V s). Ampicillin shows one
peak at 0.945 cm<sup>2</sup>/(V s). Intensity of protonated methanol
containing cluster for both ampicillin and amoxicillin has a clear
tendency to rise with sample keeping time. Ofloxacin produces two
peaks in the ion mobility distribution. A lower ion mobility peak
at 1.051 cm<sup>2</sup>/(V s) is shown to be formed by [M + H]<sup>+</sup> ions. A higher ion mobility peak appearing for samples kept
more than 48 h is shown to be formed by both [M + H]<sup>+</sup> ion
and a component identified as the [M + 2H + M]<sup>+2</sup> cluster.
The cluster probably partly dissociates in the interface producing
the [M + H]<sup>+</sup> ion