1. Zero Volt Paper Spray Ionization and Its Mechanism
- Author
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Michael Wleklinski, Rahul Narayanan, Depanjan Sarkar, Thalappil Pradeep, Yafeng Li, R. Graham Cooks, and Soumabha Bag
- Subjects
Paper ,Paper Products ,Ionization ,Mixture components ,Fission ,Binary mixtures ,Sprayers ,Monte Carlo method ,Charge fluctuations ,Mass spectrometry ,Negative ions ,Signal intensities ,Analytical Chemistry ,Ion ,Aerodynamics ,Intelligent systems ,Chemical analysis ,Chromatography paper ,Ions ,Chromatography ,Range (particle radiation) ,Stock Inlets ,Chemistry ,Analytical performance ,Volt ,Monte Carlo methods ,Nano-electrospray ionizations ,Statistical fluctuations ,Statistical Analysis ,Mixtures ,Mass spectrum ,Drops ,Ionization efficiency ,Atomic physics ,Statistical mechanics ,Mass Spectrometers - Abstract
The analytical performance and a suggested mechanism for zero volt paper spray using chromatography paper are presented. A spray is generated by the action of the pneumatic force of the mass spectrometer (MS) vacuum at the inlet. Positive and negative ion signals are observed, and comparisons are made with standard kV paper spray (PS) ionization and nanoelectrospray ionization (nESI). While the range of analytes to which zero volt PS is applicable is very similar to kV PS and nESI, differences in the mass spectra of mixtures are interpreted in terms of the more significant effects of analyte surface activity in the gentler zero volt experiment than in the other methods due to the significantly lower charge. The signal intensity of zero volt PS is also lower than in the other methods. A Monte Carlo simulation based on statistical fluctuation of positive and negative ions in solution has been implemented to explain the production of ions from initially uncharged droplets. Uncharged droplets first break up due to aerodynamics forces until they are in the 2-4 ?m size range and then undergo Coulombic fission. A model involving statistical charge fluctuations in both phases predicts detection limits similar to those observed experimentally and explains the effects of binary mixture components on relative ionization efficiencies. The proposed mechanism may also play a role in ionization by other voltage-free methods. (Figure Presented). � 2015 American Chemical Society.
- Published
- 2015
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