Fact or artifact: the representativeness of ESI‐MS for complex natural organic mixtures |
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Authors: | Nicole R Novotny Erin N Capley Alexandra C Stenson |
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Institution: | Chemistry Department, University of South Alabama, Mobile, AL, USA |
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Abstract: | Because mass spectrometers provide their own dispersion and resolution of analytes, electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI‐MS) has become a workhorse for the characterization of complex mixtures from aerosols to crude oil. Unfortunately, ESI mass spectra commonly contain multimers, adducts and fragments. For the characterization of complex mixtures of unknown initial composition, this presents a significant concern. Mixed‐multimer formation could potentially lead to results that bare no resemblance to the original mixture. Conversely, ESI‐MS has continually reflected subtle differences between natural organic matter mixtures that are in agreement with prediction or theory. Knowing the real limitations of the technique is therefore critical to avoiding both over‐interpretation and unwarranted skepticism. Here, data were collected on four mass spectrometers under a battery of conditions. Results indicate that formation of unrepresentative ions cannot entirely be ruled out, but non‐covalent multimers do not appear to make a major contribution to typical natural organic matter spectra based on collision‐induced dissociation results. Multimers also appear notably reduced when a cooling gas is present in the accumulation region of the mass spectrometer. For less complex mixtures, the choice of spray solvent can make a difference, but generally spectrum cleanliness (i.e. representativeness) comes at the price of increased selectivity. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |
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Keywords: | multimer formation dimer formation ESI artifact ESI representativeness |
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