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Sample Volatility, Polarity, and Thermal Stability

Of course, some substances are sufficiently volatile that a heated inlet line can be used to get them into a mass spectrometer. Even here, there are practical problems. Suppose a liquid or solid is sufficiently volatile, that heating it to 50°C is enough to get the vapor into the mass spectrometer through a heated inlet line. If the mass spectrometer analyzer is at 30°C, there is a significant possibility that some of the sample will condense onto the inner walls of the spectrometer and slowly vaporize from there. If the vacuum pumps cannot remove this vapor quickly, then the mass [Pg.278]

Liquids that are sufficiently volatile to be treated as gases (as in GC) are usually not very polar and have little or no hydrogen bonding between molecules. As molecular mass increases and as polar and hydrogen-bonding forces increase, it becomes increasingly difficult to treat a sample as a liquid with inlet systems such as El and chemical ionization (Cl), which require the sample to be in vapor form. Therefore, there is a transition from volatile to nonvolatile liquids, and different inlet systems may be needed. At this point, LC begins to become important for sample preparation and connection to a mass spectrometer. [Pg.279]

To achieve sufficient vapor pressure for El and Cl, a nonvolatile liquid will have to be heated strongly, but this heating may lead to its thermal degradation. If thermal instability is a problem, then inlet/ionization systems need to be considered, since these do not require prevolatilization of the sample before mass spectrometric analysis. This problem has led to the development of inlet/ionization systems that can operate at atmospheric pressure and ambient temperatures. Successive developments have led to the introduction of techniques such as fast-atom bombardment (FAB), fast-ion bombardment (FIB), dynamic FAB, thermospray, plasmaspray, electrospray, and APCI. Only the last two techniques are in common use. Further aspects of liquids in their role as solvents for samples are considered below. [Pg.279]

Solutions of solids may need to be converted into aerosols by pneumatic or sonic-spraying techniques. After solvent has evaporated from the aerosol droplets, the residual particulate solid matter can be ionized by a plasma torch. [Pg.280]

Some solid materials are very intractable to analysis by standard methods and cannot be easily vaporized or dissolved in common solvents. Glass, bone, dried paint, and archaeological samples are common examples. These materials would now be examined by laser ablation, a technique that produces an aerosol of particulate matter. The laser can be used in its defocused mode for surface profiling or in its focused mode for depth profiling. Interestingly, lasers can be used to vaporize even thermally labile materials through use of the matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI) method variant. [Pg.280]


See other pages where Sample Volatility, Polarity, and Thermal Stability is mentioned: [Pg.278]    [Pg.1]   


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Sample volatilization

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Thermal polarization

Thermal volatility

Thermal volatilization

Volatile samples

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