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Accurate Sizing of Nanoparticles Using a High-Throughput Charge Detection Mass Spectrometer without Energy Selection.

Authors :
Harper, Conner
Harper, Conner
Miller, Zachary
McPartlan, Matthew
Jordan, Jacob
Pedder, Randall
Williams, Evan
Harper, Conner
Harper, Conner
Miller, Zachary
McPartlan, Matthew
Jordan, Jacob
Pedder, Randall
Williams, Evan
Source :
ACS Nano; vol 17, iss 8
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The sizes and shapes of nanoparticles play a critical role in their chemical and material properties. Common sizing methods based on light scattering or mobility lack individual particle specificity, and microscopy-based methods often require cumbersome sample preparation and image analysis. A promising alternative method for the rapid and accurate characterization of nanoparticle size is charge detection mass spectrometry (CDMS), an emerging technique that measures the masses of individual ions. A recently constructed CDMS instrument designed specifically for high acquisition speed, efficiency, and accuracy is described. This instrument does not rely on an ion energy filter or estimates of ion energy that have been previously required for mass determination, but instead uses direct, in situ measurements. A standardized sample of ∼100 nm diameter polystyrene nanoparticles and ∼50 nm polystyrene nanoparticles with amine-functionalized surfaces are characterized using CDMS and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Individual nanoparticle masses measured by CDMS are transformed to diameters, and these size distributions are in close agreement with distributions measured by TEM. CDMS analysis also reveals dimerization of ∼100 nm nanoparticles in solution that cannot be determined by TEM due to the tendency of nanoparticles to agglomerate when dried onto a surface. Comparing the acquisition and analysis times of CDMS and TEM shows particle sizing rates up to ∼80× faster are possible using CDMS, even when samples ∼50× more dilute were used. The combination of both high-accuracy individual nanoparticle measurements and fast acquisition rates by CDMS represents an important advance in nanoparticle analysis capabilities.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
ACS Nano; vol 17, iss 8
Notes :
application/pdf, ACS Nano vol 17, iss 8
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1449579455
Document Type :
Electronic Resource