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Low-pressure chemical ionization

Anions of SF (n = 1 to 6) provide a transition to larger molecules. The anions of SF6 and SF4 are among the most frequently studied in the gas phase. The ECD, atmospheric pressure ionization, and low-pressure chemical ionization mass spectrometry have been used to study SF6. The precise and accurate adiabatic electron... [Pg.193]

Figure 2. Cleavage of -phenylalkyl isothiocyanates by negative-ion low pressure chemical ionization MS... Figure 2. Cleavage of -phenylalkyl isothiocyanates by negative-ion low pressure chemical ionization MS...
Bouchonnet, S., D. Libong, and M. Sablier. 2004. Low pressure chemical ionization in ion trap mass spectrometry. Ear. J. Mass Spectrom. 10 509-521. [Pg.43]

I. Eeirer, M. C. Hennion and D. Barcelo, Immunosorbents coupled on-line with liquid chi omatography/atmospheric pressure chemical ionization/mass specti ometiy for the part per trillion level determination of pesticides in sediments and natural waters using low preconcenti ation volumes . Anal. Chem. 69 4508-4514 (1997). [Pg.375]

If a high -molecular-weight compound is being studied by LC-MS, the analyst has little choice in the ionization method to use, with atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization (APCl) being wholly inappropriate. However, when low -molecular-weight componnds are involved, both electrospray ionization and APCl are potentially of value. [Pg.242]

Polymeric precolumns of styrene-divinylbenzene were used by Aguilar et al. to monitor pesticides in river water. Water samples (50 mL) were trace enriched on-line followed by analysis using LC combined with diode-array detection. LC atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) MS was used for confirmatory purposes. It was found that after the pesticides had been extracted from the water sample, they could be stored on the precartridges for up to 3 months without any detectable degradation. This work illustrates an advantage of SPE for water samples. Many pesticides which may not be stable when stored in water, even at low temperature, may be extracted and/or enriched on SPE media and stored under freezer conditions with no detectable degradation. This provides an excellent way to store samples for later analysis. [Pg.826]

Negative atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APC) low-energy collision activation mss spectrometry has also been employed for the characterization of flavonoids in extracts of fresh herbs. Besides the separation, quantitative determination and identification of flavonoids, the objective of the study was the comparison of the efficacy of the various detection systems in the analysis of flavonoids in herb extracts. Freeze-dried herbs (0.5g of chives, cress, dill, lovage, mint, oregano, parsley, rosemary, tarragon and thyme) were ground and extracted with 20 ml of 62.5 per cent aqueous methanol. After sedimentation the suspension was filtered and used for HPLC analyses. Separations were carried out in an... [Pg.170]

Atmospheric Pressure Chemical Ionization (APCI)/MS APCI/MS is used to analyze compounds of intermediate molecular weight (100-1,500 da) and intermediate polarity and is particularly useful for the analysis of biochemicals such as triacylglycerides, carotenoids, and lipids (Byrdwell, 2001). For volatile, nonpolar compounds of low molecular weight, GC/MS is preferred to APCl/MS whereas APl-electrospray/ MS provides better results for larger, more polar materials. The selection of APCl/MS over GC/MS or APl-electrospray/MS depends on the compounds to be analyzed. Many LC/MS instruments can be easily switched between APCl/MS and APl-electrospray/MS so that it can be rapidly determined which ionization process is more suitable to a given chemical. Additional manipulations such as pre and postcolumn derivatization reactions (Nagy et al., 2004 Peters et al., 2004) or coulometric oxidation (Diehl et al., 2001) can make the chemicals of interest more amenable to detection by APCI. [Pg.162]

Atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) is a gas phase ionization process based on ion-molecule reactions between a neutral molecule and reactant ions [31]. The method is very similar to chemical ionization with the difference that ionization occurs at atmospheric pressure. APCI requires that the liquid sample is completely evaporated (Fig. 1.12). Typical flow rates are in the range 200-1000 xL min , but low flow APCI has also been described. First, an aerosol is formed with the help of a pneumatic nebulizer using nitrogen. The aerosol is directly formed in a heated quartz or ceramic tube (typical temperatures 200-500 °C) where the mobile phase and the analytes are evaporated. The temperature of the nebulized mobile phase itself remains in the range 120-150 °C due to evapo-... [Pg.17]

Justesen, U., Negative atmospheric pressure chemical ionization low-energy collision activation mass spectrometry for the characterization of flavonoids in extracts of fresh herbs, J. Chromatogr. A, 902, 369, 2000. [Pg.134]

Mass Spectrometry Mass to charge ratio (m/z) allows specific compound ID determination. Several t)rpes of ionization techniques electrospray, atmospheric pressure chemical ionization, electron impact. The detector usually contains low volume cell through which the mobile phase passes carrpng the sample components. [Pg.11]

A striking feature of the ILs is their low vapor pressure. This, on the other hand, is a factor hampering their investigation by MS. For example, a technique like electron impact (El) MS, based on thermal evaporation of the sample prior to ionization of the vaporized analyte by collision with an electron beam, has only rarely been applied for the analysis of this class of compounds. In contrast, nonthermal ionization methods, like fast atom bombardment (FAB), secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS), atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI), ESI, and MALDI suit better for this purpose. Measurement on the atomic level after burning the sample in a hot plasma (up to 8000°C), as realized in inductively coupled plasma (ICP) MS, has up to now only rarely been applied in the field of IE (characterization of gold particles dissolved in IE [1]). This method will potentially attract more interest in the future, especially, when the coupling of this method with chromatographic separations becomes a routine method. [Pg.373]

Coupling of liquid chromatography with mass spectrometry allows unequivocal online spectrometric identification of all nitrofurans at the very low residue concentrations required by regulatory agencies for confirmatory analysis in animal-derived foods. Typical examples of mass spectrometry applications in confirming nitrofuran residues in edible animal products employ thermospray (174, 176), ionspray (166), or atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (157) interfaces. [Pg.948]

Recent advances in electrospray ionization (ESI), atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization (APCI), thermospray, and particle beam LC-MS have advanced the analyst toward the universal HPLC detector, but price and complexity are still the primary stumbling blocks. Thus, HPLC-MS remains expensive and the technology has only recently been described. Early commercial LC-MS uses particle beam and thermospray sources, but ESI and APCI interfaces now dominate. Liquid chromatography MS can represent a fast and reliable method for structural analyses of nonvolatile compounds such as phenolic compounds (36,37), especially for low-molecular-weight plant phenolics (38), but the limited resolving power of LC hinders the widespread use of its application for phenolics as compared to GC-MS. [Pg.786]


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