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1.
Potential difficulties associated with background silver salt clusters during matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS) of nonpolar polymers are reported. Silver salt cluster ions were observed from m/z 1500 to 7000 when acidic, polar matrices, such as 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (DHB), all-trans-retinoic acid (RTA) or 2-(4-hydroxyphenylazo)benzoic acid (HABA), were used for the analysis of nonpolar polymers. These background signals could be greatly reduced or eliminated by the use of nonpolar matrices such as anthracene or pyrene. Representative examples of these background interferences are demonstrated during the analysis of low molecular weight nonpolar polymers including polybutadiene and polystyrene. Nonpolar polymers analyzed with acidic, polar matrices (e.g., RTA) and silver cationization reagents can yield lower quality mass spectral results when interferences due to silver clusters are present. Replacing the polar matrices with nonpolar matrices or the silver salts with copper salts substantially improved the quality of the analytical results. In addition, it was found that silver contamination cannot be completely removed from standard stainless steel sample plates, although the presence of silver contamination was greatly reduced after thorough cleaning of the sample plate with aluminum oxide grit. Carry-over silver may cationize polymer samples and complicate the interpretation of data obtained using nonpolar matrices in the absence of added cationization reagents.  相似文献   

2.
A new atmospheric pressure (AP) infrared (IR) matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) ion source was developed and interfaced with a Thermo Finnigan LCQ ion trap mass spectrometer. The source utilized a miniature all-solid-state optical parametric oscillator (OPO)-based IR laser system tunable in the lambda = 1.5-4 microm spectral range and a nitrogen ultraviolet (UV) laser (lambda = 337 nm) for use in comparative studies. The system demonstrated comparable performance at 3 microm and 337 nm wavelengths if UV matrices were used. However, AP IR-MALDI using a 3 microm wavelength showed good performance with a much broader choice of matrices including glycerol and liquid water. AP IR-MALDI mass spectra of peptides in the mass range up to 2000 Da were obtained directly from aqueous solutions at atmospheric conditions for the first time. A potential use of the new AP IR-MALDI ion source includes direct MS analysis of biological cells and tissues in a normal atmospheric environment as well as on-line coupling of mass spectrometers with liquid separation techniques.  相似文献   

3.
Atmospheric pressure matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization (AP‐MALDI) has proven a convenient and rapid method for ion production in the mass spectrometric (MS) analysis of biomolecules. AP‐MALDI and electrospray ionization (ESI) sources are easily interchangeable in most mass spectrometers. However, AP‐MALDI suffers from less‐than‐optimal sensitivity due to ion losses during transport from the atmosphere into the vacuum of the mass spectrometer. Here, we study the signal‐to‐noise ratio (S/N) gains observed when an on‐chip dynamic pre‐concentration/focusing approach is coupled to AP‐MALDI for the MS analysis of neuropeptides and protein digests. It was found that, in comparison with conventional AP‐MALDI targets, focusing targets showed (1) a sensitivity enhancement of approximately two orders of magnitude with S/N gains of 200–900 for hydrophobic substrates, and 150–400 for weak cation‐exchange (WCX) substrates; (2) improved detection limits as low as 5 fmol/µL for standard peptides; (3) significantly reduced matrix background; and (4) higher inter‐day reproducibility. The improved sensitivity allowed successful tandem mass spectrometric (MS/MS) sequencing of dilute solutions of a derivatized tryptic digest of a protein standard, and enabled the first reported AP‐MALDI MS detection of neuropeptides from Aedes aegypti mosquito heads. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

4.
Thermogravimetry-differential scanning calorimetry-mass spectrometry-Fourier transform infrared spectrometry(TG-DSC-MS-FTIR) simultaneous analysis was used to study the effects of 10.7 μm and 40 nm Al on the thermal decomposition of the Hexogen/ammonium perchlorate(RDX/AP,1/2,mass ratio) mixture.TG-DSC results show that there are two mass loss processes for the thermal decomposition of RDX/AP/Al.The first one is mainly ascribed to the thermal decomposition of RDX.The reaction rate of RDX/AP/10.7 μm Al is so fast that the apparent activation energy,calculated by model-free Friedman method,is negative,which is the same as that of RDX/AP.30%(mass fraction) 40 nm Al added in RDX/AP change the activation energy from negative to positive value.The second mass loss process of the RDX/AP/A1 mixture is ascribed to the thermal decomposition of AP.This process can be divided into three stages for RDX/AP with and without Al.The kinetics model is not changed in the presence of micro-sized Al,while it is changed from CnB/D1/D1 to CnB/D1/D4 after the addition of 40 nm Al to RDX/AP.The reaction rate constant of the first stage and the end temperature of the second stage decrease,while the end temperatures of the third stage increase in the presence of 40 nm Al.The MS-FTIR results show there is a competition between the formation reactions of HNCO,N2O and NO2 during the second mass loss process.  相似文献   

5.
There is increasing interest and demand for real multi-residue methods able to simultaneously determine pesticides with a broad spectrum of chemical characteristics in environmental and biological matrices. A method based on solid-phase extraction with a Carbograph 4 cartridge and liquid chromatography with electrospray mass spectrometry (LC-ES-MS) enabling simultaneous determination of non-acidic and acidic pesticides in real water samples is described. On repeatedly (n=5) extracting 4 l of drinking water (spike level 50 ng/l), 2 l of ground water (spike level 100 ng/l) and 1 l of river water (spike level 200 ng/l), recovery of 26 base/neutral pesticides and 13 acidic pesticides were equal to or better than 80%, except for carbendazim (67%), butocarboxim (73%), aldicarb (75%) and molinate (77%). Relative standard deviations ranged between 4 and 15%. Final extracts containing acidic and non-acidic pesticides were analyzed in a single chromatographic run while the ES-MS system was operated in both positive and negative ion modes. With the aim of finding the best operating conditions, in terms of sensitivity, the pH of the LC eluent was varied in the 2.9-8.4 range. Altogether, the best results were obtained by using an LC eluent containing 1 mmol/l formic acid. Over the entire pH range considered, well shaped peaks for both basic and acidic analytes were achieved by the use of a new generation LC column. By extracting selected ion current profiles from the total ion current mass chromatogram relative to analysis of 4 l of drinking water spiked with 50 ng/l of each of the 39 analytes, estimated limits of detection ranged between 0.05 and 1.5 ng/l, except for propyzamide (8 ng/l) and 2,4-DB (3 ng/l).  相似文献   

6.
The detection of water-soluble vitamins B(1), B(2), B(6), B(12) and C by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) time-of-flight mass spectrometry (TOFMS) was attempted by studying 17 porphyrin matrices. Comparative studies of porphyrin matrices, useful mass spectral window, matrix/analyte molar ratio (M/A), ultraviolet-visible absorption characteristics and quantitative results were made. Most porphyrin matrices provide a useful mass spectral window in the low-mass range. The optimal M/A increases with increasing molecular mass of the vitamin. Vitamin B(12) possesses the highest molecular mass and requires a higher M/A. The presence of hydroxyl or carboxyl groups in the porphyrin is an indicator of a useful MALDI matrix. Vitamins B(2) and B(6) were readily ionized upon irradiation with a 337 nm laser without the use of any porphyrin matrix. Improved linearity and sensitivity of the calibration curves were obtained with samples prepared with a constant M/A. The limits of detection and quantitation are at the picomole level. The results indicate that MALDI-TOFMS with porphyrin matrices is a rapid and viable technique for the detection of low molecular mass water-soluble vitamins.  相似文献   

7.
The application of nonpolar matrices for the analysis of low molecular weight nonpolar synthetic polymers using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS) is demonstrated. Anthracene, pyrene, and acenaphthene were utilized as nonpolar matrices for the analysis of polybutadiene, polyisoprene, and polystyrene samples of various average molecular weights ranging from about 700 to 5000. The standard MALDI-MS approach for the analysis of these types of polymers involves the use of conventional acidic matrices, such asall-trans-retinoic acid, with an additional cationization reagent. The nonpolar matrices used in this study are shown to be as equally effective as the conventional matrices. The uniform mixing of the nonpolar matrices and the nonpolar analytes enhances the MALDI-MS spectral reproducibility. Silver salts were found to be the best cationization reagents for all of the cases studied. Copper salts worked well for polystyrene, poorly for polyisoprene, and not at all for polybutadiene samples. These matrices should be useful for the characterization of hydrocarbon polymers and other analytes, such as modified polymers, which may potentially be sensitive to acidic matrices.  相似文献   

8.
Three different types of fullerene derivatives, namely methano[60]fullerene dicarboxylate esters, [60]fulleropyrrolidines, and imino[60]fullerenes, were analyzed by matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization time‐of‐flight mass spectrometry using trans‐4‐tert‐butyl‐4′‐nitrostilbene (TBNS), 1,8,9‐anthracenetriol (dithranol), 6‐aza‐2‐thiothymine (ATT), 2,5‐dihydroxybenzoic acid (DHB) and carbazole as matrices. Unit mass resolution (sufficient to clearly resolve isotopic peaks), high signal‐to‐noise ratio, and clean mass spectra for all analytes were acquired by the optimization of experimental parameters and choice of optimal solvent for the matrix and molar matrix‐to‐analyte ratio. The new matrix, TBNS, gave the best results in the positive‐ion mode, as it can provide higher yields of analyte molecular ions at a lower laser threshold than the other four matrices, together with a very low degree of unwanted fragmentations. In the negative‐ion mode dithranol was better than TBNS, and the other three matrices gave relatively poor mass spectra for these fullerene derivatives. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

9.
The utility of matrix-assisted laser desorption mass spectrometry for characterizing products of in vitro processing of synthetic dynorphin A (Dyn A) peptides in biologic matrices is described. A series of laser desorption matrices were tested for their response to Dyn A (1–6), Dyn A (1–7), Dyn A (1–8), Dyn A (1–9), Dyn A (1–l0), Dyn A (1–13), Dyn A (2-17), and Dyn A (1–17). α-Cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid was chosen as a suitable matrix for subsequent studies. Mass spectra of dynorphin peptides indicated a good signal-to-noise response down to (1) 10 fmole of Dyn A (1–10) amide standard in aqueous acidic solution and (2) a concentration of 10-7 M for seven dynorphin peptides spiked into human plasma. Two examples of the mass spectrometric analysis of the products of in vitro processing are presented: Dyn A (1–13) and Dyn A (1–17) in human blood. The presence and identity of processed peptides can be simply inferred from the molecular masses provided by the mass spectrometric measurement without extensive sample purification. A comparison of matrixassisted laser desorption mass spectrometry is made with high-performance liquid chromatography.  相似文献   

10.
The protocol and various matrices were examined for quantification of biomolecules in both the low ca. 1200 amu and mid mass 6000-12000 amu ranges using an internal standard. Comparative studies of different matrices of MALDI quantitative analysis showed that the best accuracy and standard curve linearity were obtained for two matrices: (a) 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (DHB) combined with a comatrix of fucose and 5-methoxysalicylic acid (MSA) and (b) ferulic acid/fucose. In the low mass range, the quantitative limit was in the 30 fmol range and in the mid mass range the quantitative limit was in the 250 fmol range. Linear response was observed over 2-3 decades of analyte concentration. The relative error of the standard curve slope was 1.3-1.8% with correlation coefficients of 0.996-0.998.The main problem for quantitative measurement was suppression of the signal of the less concentrated component (analyte or internal standard) by the more concentrated component. The effect was identified with saturation of the matrix by the analyte. The threshold of matrix saturation was found to be in the range of 1/(3000-5000) analyte/matrix molar ratio. To avoid matrix saturation the (analyte+internal standard) to matrix molar ratio should be below this threshold. Thus the internal standard concentration should be as low as possible.DHB/MSA/fucose and ferulic acid/fucose matrices demonstrated good accuracy and linearity for standard curves even when the internal standard had chemical properties different from the analyte. However, use of an internal standard with different chemical properties requires highly stable instrumental parameters as well as constant (analyte+internal standard)/matrix molar ratio for all samples.  相似文献   

11.
The protocol and various matrices were examined for quantification of biomolecules in both the low ca. 1200 amu and mid mass 6000–12000 amu ranges using an internal standard. Comparative studies of different matrices of MALDI quantitative analysis showed that the best accuracy and standard curve linearity were obtained for two matrices: (a) 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (DHB) combined with a comatrix of fucose and 5-methoxysalicylic acid (MSA) and (b) ferulic acid/fucose. In the low mass range, the quantitative limit was in the 30 fmol range and in the mid mass range the quantitative limit was in the 250 fmol range. Linear response was observed over 2–3 decades of analyte concentration. The relative error of the standard curve slope was 1.3–1.8% with correlation coefficients of 0.996–0.998.The main problem for quantitative measurement was suppression of the signal of the less concentrated component (analyte or internal standard) by the more concentrated component. The effect was identified with saturation of the matrix by the analyte. The threshold of matrix saturation was found to be in the range of 1/(3000–5000) analyte/matrix molar ratio. To avoid matrix saturation the (analyte+internal standard) to matrix molar ratio should be below this threshold. Thus the internal standard concentration should be as low as possible.DHB/MSA/fucose and ferulic acid/fucose matrices demonstrated good accuracy and linearity for standard curves even when the internal standard had chemical properties different from the analyte. However, use of an internal standard with different chemical properties requires highly stable instrumental parameters as well as constant (analyte+internal standard)/matrix molar ratio for all samples.  相似文献   

12.
Salts with low melting points, also termed room-temperature ionic liquids, can be used as matrices in matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF). They have great vacuum stability, and can dissolve polar and apolar solutes including carbohydrates, biological oligomers and proteins. The ionic liquids give much more homogeneous sample solutions compared with solid matrices. We demonstrate the usefulness of using ionic matrices to determine the molecular weight of DNA oligomers by direct TOF mass spectrometric analysis. Three oligonucleotides were tested, (d(pT)(10), d(pC)(11), and d(pC)(12)), with several ionic matrices synthesized from different bases associated to two acids (3-hydroxypicolinic acid and 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid). The results obtained show that the best ionic matrices enhance the ion peak intensity of the oligonucleotides with respect to conventional molecular matrices under our experimental conditions. In one case, an ionic matrix provided a signal-to-noise ratio ten times higher than the corresponding molecular matrix. Several of the tested ionic matrices were liquids. However, all working ionic matrices were solids.  相似文献   

13.
Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF-MS) is a sensitive mass spectrometric technique which utilises acidic materials as matrices for laser energy absorption, desorption and ionisation of analytes. These matrix materials produce background signals particularly in the low-mass range and make the detection and identification of small molecules difficult and nearly impossible. To overcome this problem this paper introduces matrix-free material-enhanced laser desorption/ionisation mass spectrometry (mf-MELDI-MS) for the screening and analysis of small molecules such as carbohydrates. For this purpose, 4,4'-azo-dianiline was immobilised on silica gel enabling the absorption of laser energy sufficient for successful desorption and ionisation of low molecular weight compounds. The particle and pore sizes, the solvent system for suspension and the sample preparation procedures have been optimised. The newly synthesised MELDI material delivered excellent spectra with regard to signal-to-noise ratio and detection sensitivity. Finally, wheat straw degradation products and Salix alba L. plant extracts were analysed proving the high performance and excellent behaviour of the introduced material.  相似文献   

14.
Zhu X  Wu L  Mungra DC  Xia S  Zhu J 《The Analyst》2012,137(10):2454-2458
In matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF-MS), the analysis capability, especially for small molecules, is often compromised by the addition of organic matrices due to the existence of background signals. Herein we report a new detection method on the utility of core-shell nanoparticles (CSNPs) as energy transfer structure in LDI-TOF-MS. The LDI-TOF-MS based on gold-silica core-shell nanoparticles with ultrathin silica shell of 2-4 nm (Au@utSiO(2) CSNPs) was effectively applied to the analysis of many compounds, especially for small functional molecules and polymers, which was more promising than MALDI-TOF-MS.  相似文献   

15.
Recently, matrices based on oligomers of dioxin and thiophene (polymer-assisted laser desorption/ionization (PALDI)) have been described for mass spectrometric (MS) analysis of low molecular weight compounds (Woldegiorgis A, von Kieseritzky F, Dahlstedt E, Hellberg J, Brinck T, Roeraade J. Rapid Commun. Mass Spectrom. 2004; 18: 841-852). In this paper, we report the use of PALDI matrices for low molecular weight polymers. An evaluation with polystyrene and polyethylene glycol showed that no charge transfer ionization occurs. Ionization is mediated through metal ion adduction. Comparison of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) data for two very low molecular weight polymers with data obtained from size-exclusion chromatography (SEC) revealed a systematic difference regarding mean molecular weight and dispersity. Further, the mass spectra obtained with PALDI matrices had a higher signal-to-noise ratio than the spectra obtained with conventional matrices. For polymers with higher molecular weights (>1500 Da), the conventional matrices gave better performance. For evaluation of the MALDI spectra, three non-linear mathematical models were evaluated to model the cumulative distributions of the different oligomers and their maximal values of Mw, Mn and PDI. Models based on sigmoidal or Boltzmann equations proved to be most suitable. Objective modeling tools are necessary to compare different sample and instrumental conditions during method optimization of MALDI analysis of polymers, since the bias between MALDI and SEC data can be misleading.  相似文献   

16.
A rapid multianalyte‐multiclass method with little sample manipulation has been developed for the simultaneous determination of eleven mycotoxins in different food commodities by using ultra‐high‐pressure liquid chromatography coupled to triple quadrupole mass spectrometry (UHPLC/MS/MS). Toxins were extracted from the samples with acetonitrile/water (80:20, v/v) 0.1% HCOOH and, after a two‐fold dilution with water, directly injected into the system. Thanks to the fast high‐resolution separation of UHPLC, the eleven mycotoxins were separated by gradient elution in only 4 min. The method has been validated in three food matrices (maize kernels, dry pasta (wheat), and eight‐multicereal babyfood (wheat, maize, rice, oat, barley, rye, sorghum, millet)) at four different concentration levels. Satisfactory recoveries were obtained (70–110%) and precision (expressed as relative standard deviation) was typically below 15% with very few exceptions. Quantification of samples was carried out with matrix‐matched standards calibration. The lowest concentration successfully validated in sample was as low as 0.5 µg/kg for aflatoxins and ochratoxin A in babyfood, and 20 µg/kg for the rest of the selected mycotoxins in all matrices tested. Deoxynivalenol could be only validated at 200 µg/kg, due the poor sensitivity for this mycotoxin analysis. With only two exceptions (HT‐2 and deoxynivalenol), the limits of detection (LODs), estimated for a signal‐to‐noise ratio of 3 from the chromatograms of samples spiked at the lowest level validated, varied between 0.1 and 1 µg/kg in the three food matrices tested. The method was applied to the analysis of different kinds of samples. Positive findings were confirmed by acquiring two transitions (Q quantification, q confirmation) and evaluating the Q/q ratio. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

17.
The widespread use and questionable environmental acceptability of nonionic surfactants make the alkylphenol ethoxylates (APEOs) and their neutral and acidic degradation products a focus of interest in environmental analytical chemistry. The characterization and especially quantification of polyethoxylate mixtures in environmental matrices is a challenge, because of the complexity of the mixtures. A review on trace analysis of APEOs using atmospheric pressure ionization mass spectrometry, including sample preparation and liquid chromatographic separation, is presented. In this Special Feature, the performances of two ionization methods, atmospheric pressure chemical ionization and electrospray ionization, is discussed in terms of selectivity and sensitivity toward oligomeric mixtures of APEOs. Capabilities and limitations associated with the liquid chromatographic/mass spectrometric detection of APEOs, their main degradation products and their halogenated metabolites, and also specific issues related to the sample preparation, formation of fragments, adducts and cluster ions, quantification of oligomeric mixtures and signal suppression effects in complex matrices, are discussed. Conclusions and future perspectives are outlined.  相似文献   

18.
Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOFMS) with nonpolar matrices has been investigated for its applicability to the characterization of atmospheric resid crude oil fractions. The data obtained by use of nonpolar matrices was compared with that from polar matrices as well as from direct LDI-MS and field ionization mass spectrometry. Nonpolar matrices, such as anthracene or 9-cyanoanthracene, yield only a single radical molecular cation upon LDI. Thus, no interfering matrix-related ions are present during the MALDI-TOFMS analysis of the crude oil sample. Nonpolar matrices yield molecular mass distributions from linear mode MALDI-TOFMS that are comparable to distributions found with LDI-MS. An advantage of nonpolar matrices is the increased production of analyte ions, which allows reflectron mode MALDI-TOFMS to be performed. Nonpolar matrices are also shown to be less sensitive to solvent and sample preparation conditions than conventional polar matrices. These results suggest that nonpolar matrices may be favorable alternatives to more traditional polar or acidic matrices commonly used in the MALDI mass spectral characterization of crude oil related samples.  相似文献   

19.
The applicability of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) to the analysis of wax esters (WEs) was investigated. A series of metal salts of 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (DHB) was synthesized and tested as possible matrices. Alkali metal (Li, Na, K, Rb, Cs) and transition metal (Cu, Ag) salts were studied. The matrix properties were evaluated, including solubility in organic solvents, threshold laser power that should be applied for successful desorption/ionization of WEs, the nature of the matrix ions and the mass range occupied by them, and the complexity of the isotope clusters for individual metals. Lithium salt of dihydroxybenzoic acid (LiDHB) performed the best and matrices with purified lithium isotopes ((6)LiDHB or (7)LiDHB) were recommended for WEs. Three sample preparation procedures were compared: (1) mixing the sample and matrix in a glass vial and deposition of the mixture on a MALDI plate (Mix), (2) deposition of sample followed by deposition of matrix (Sa/Ma), and (3) deposition of matrix followed by deposition of sample (Ma/Sa). Morphology of the samples was studied by scanning electron microscopy. The best sample preparation technique was Ma/Sa with the optimum sample to matrix molar ratio 1 : 100. Detection limit was in the low picomolar range. The relative response of WEs decreased with their molecular weight, and minor differences between signals of saturated and monounsaturated WEs were observed. MALDI spectra of WEs showed molecular adducts with lithium [M + Li](+). Fragments observed in postsource decay (PSD) spectra were related to the acidic part of WEs [RCOOH + Li](+) and they were used for structure assignment. MALDI with LiDHB was used for several samples of natural origin, including insect and plant WEs. A good agreement with GC/MS data was achieved. Moreover, MALDI allowed higher WEs to be analyzed, up to 64 carbon atoms in Ginkgo biloba leaves extract.  相似文献   

20.
Purified olive pulp glucuronoxylans, with a Xyl/GlcA ratio of 7:1, were subjected to mild acid hydrolysis and the mixture of oligosaccharides obtained was fractionated by size exclusion chromatography. One elution fraction representative of low molecular weight oligosaccharides was analysed by mass spectrometry using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation (MALDI) and electrospray ionisation (ESI) as ionisation methods, in the positive mode. Both types of spectra showed cationised molecules [M + Na](+) of xylo-oligosaccharides in a range below m/z 1,000. The xylo-oligosaccharide structures identified were series of neutral oligosaccharides of xylose (Xyl(n), n = 3-7), of acidic oligosaccharides substituted by one glucuronic acid (Xyl(n)GlcA, n = 3-5) and by two glucuronic acid residues (Xyl(n)GlcA(2), n = 2 and 3), and also of acidic oligosaccharides substituted with one 4-O-methylglucuronic acid residue (Xyl(n)meGlcA, n = 2-4). The proposed structures were confirmed by tandem mass (MS/MS) spectra obtained using collision induced dissociation of the molecular ions. Fragmentation of cationised adducts of neutral Xyl(n) yielded C- and A-type fragments, while ammonium adducts mainly yielded B-type fragments. The fragmentation of the sodium adducts of acidic oligosaccharides (Xyl(n)meGlcA, Xyl(n)GlcA) resulted in the loss of the substituting residue (GlcA or meGlcA) as the predominant fragment, while the corresponding ammonium adducts yielded B-type fragments.  相似文献   

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