Molecular Mass Spectroscopy Surface Characterization
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Transcript Molecular Mass Spectroscopy Surface Characterization
Molecular Mass Spectroscopy
• Molecular structure
• Composition of mixtures
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Molecular mass spectra
Ion Source
Mass Spectrometers
Applications
12-1
Molecular Mass Spectra
• Removal of electron by electron bombardment
In vapor phase
Charged species is the molecular ion
• Electron causes excitation and fragmentation
Major product is base peak
Assigned 100% relative abundance
Smaller fragments also form
12-2
Ion Sources
• Ion source has profound effect on spectra
Gas phase source
Vaporized then ionized
Desorption source
Conversion of liquid or solid to gas
• Hard source
Ion in excited state
Fragments produced
• Soft source
Little fragmentation
Mainly ion of molecule
12-3
12-4
12-5
Electron-Impact Source
• Sample as vapor
• Ionized by beam of electrons
W or Re filament
70 V potential
1E-6 effective
M+e- ->M++2e
High potentials in
accelerating region
1E3 to 1E4 volts
• KE of ion in 1000 V
KE=qV=zeV
KE=1*1.6E-19 C*1000 V
1.6E-16 J
* KE independent of
mass
* Velocity varies with
mass
* KE=0.5mv2
12-6
Electron Impact Spectra
• Energy from e- accelerated by 70V
Find in J/mol to compare bond energy
KE=eV
1.6E-19 C *70 V=1.12E-17 CV/eFor a mole
* 1.12E-17 J*6.02E23 =6.7E6 J/mol
Bond energy 200 to 600 kJ/mol
12-7
Electron Impact Spectra
12-8
Electron Impact Spectra
12-9
Electron Impact Spectra
• Sensitive method
• Fragments useful in identification
• Lack of molecular ion peak
M+, difficult to identify specie
Molecules must be in vapor phase
Stability issues in vapor phase
• MW<1000 dalton
12-10
Isotopics
• Isotopic variation can impact spectra
12-11
Chemical Ionization
• Sample ionized by secondary ionization
Reagent gas ionized by electrons, then
ionized reagent gas reacts with sample gas
Reagent to sample ratio
1E3 to 1E4
• Methane most common reagent gas
CH4+ and CH3+ (about 90%), CH2+
12-12
Chemical Ionization
• Produces ions that are 1 proton more or 1
proton less than molecule
Transfer of C2H5+ give M+29 peak
• Field Ionization
Large electric field
1E8 V/cm
* Mainly produces M and M+1 peaks
12-13
Comparison of spectra
• a-electron impact
• b-field ionization
• c-desorption
12-14
Large molecule desorption
• Solid or liquid samples directly energized into gas
phase
Molecular or protonated ion
• Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption/Ionization (MALDI)
Soft Ionization
Sample dissolved in solution containing UVabsorber and solvent
Solution evaporated and precipitate formed
Pulsed laser used to excite precipitate
Molecular ion desorbed from surface of precipitate
12-15
12-16
Electrospray Ionization
• Solution pumped through a
needle
Needle is at kV potential
compared to
surrounding electrode
Droplets become
charged
Solvent evaporates,
droplets shrink and
charge density increases
• Can be combined with a
number of methods
• Useful for large molecules
• M+, M2+
12-17
Electrospray MS spectra
12-18
Fast Atom Bombardment
• Samples in glycerol
• Bombarded by Xe or Ar
atoms
Several keV
• Atoms and ions
sputtered from surface
• Production of fragments
12-19
Mass Spectrometers
12-20
Magnetic sector
12-21
Ion Trap Analyzer
• Variable radio frequency voltage applied to the
ring electrode
• Ions of appropriate m/z circulate in stable orbit
• scan radio frequency
heavier particles stable
lighter particles collide with ring electrode
• ejected ions detected by transducer as an ion
current
12-22
Ion Trap
12-23
Applications
• Identification of Pure Compounds:
Nominal M+ peak (one m/z resolution) (or (M+1)+ or (M1)+)
• gives MW (not EI)
Exact m/z (fractional m/z resolution) can give stoichiometry
but not structure (double-focusing instrument)
Fragment peaks give evidence for functional groups
(M-15)+ peak methyl
(M-18)+ OH or water
(M-45)+ CO2H
series (M-14)+, (M-28)+, (M-42)+..sequential CH2
• loss in alkanes
Isotopic peaks can indicate presence of certain atoms
Cl, Br, S, Si
* Isotopic ratios can suggest plausible molecules from
M+,
• Comparison with library spectra
12-24