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Sensitive and Comprehensive Detection of Chemical Warfare Agents in Air by Atmospheric Pressure Chemical Ionization Ion Trap Tandem Mass Spectrometry with Counterflow Introduction
A highly
sensitive and specific real-time field-deployable detection
technology, based on counterflow air introduction atmospheric pressure
chemical ionization, has been developed for a wide range of chemical
warfare agents (CWAs) comprising gaseous (two blood agents, three
choking agents), volatile (six nerve gases and one precursor agent,
five blister agents), and nonvolatile (three lachrymators, three vomiting
agents) agents in air. The approach can afford effective chemical
ionization, in both positive and negative ion modes, for ion trap
multiple-stage mass spectrometry (MS<sup><i>n</i></sup>).
The volatile and nonvolatile CWAs tested provided characteristic ions,
which were fragmented into MS<sup>3</sup> product ions in positive
and negative ion modes. Portions of the fragment ions were assigned
by laboratory hybrid mass spectrometry (MS) composed of linear ion
trap and high-resolution mass spectrometers. Gaseous agents were detected
by MS or MS<sup>2</sup> in negative ion mode. The limits of detection
for a 1 s measurement were typically at or below the microgram per
cubic meter level except for chloropicrin (submilligram per cubic
meter). Matrix effects by gasoline vapor resulted in minimal false-positive
signals for all the CWAs and some signal suppression in the case of
mustard gas. The moisture level did influence the measurement of the
CWAs