Experimental ion
mobility–mass spectrometry (IM–MS)
results are often correlated to three-dimensional structures based
on theoretical chemistry calculations. The bottleneck of this approach
is the need for accurate values, both experimentally and theoretically
predicted. Here, we continue the development of the trend-based analyses
to extract structural information from experimental IM–MS data
sets. The experimental collision cross-sections (CCSs) of synthetic
systems such as homopolymers and small ionic clusters are investigated
in terms of CCS trends as a function of the number of repetitive units
(e.g., degree of polymerization (DP) for homopolymers) and for each
detected charge state. Then, we computed the projected areas of expanding
but perfectly defined geometric objects using an in-house software
called MoShade. The shapes were modeled using computer-aided design
software where we considered only geometric factors: no atoms, mass,
chemical potentials, or interactions were taken into consideration
to make the method orthogonal to classical methods for 3D shape assessments
using time-consuming computational chemistry. Our modeled shape evolutions
favorably compared to experimentally obtained CCS trends, meaning
that the apparent volume or envelope of homogeneously distributed
mass effectively modeled the ion–drift gas interactions as
sampled by IM–MS. The CCSs of convex shapes could be directly
related to their surface area. More importantly, this relationship
seems to hold even for moderately concave shapes, such as those obtained
by geometry-optimized structures of ions from conventional computational
chemistry methods. Theoretical sets of expanding beads-on-a-string
shapes allowed extracting accurate bead and string dimensions for
two homopolymers, without modeling any chemical interactions