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1.
Anal Chim Acta ; 1252: 341047, 2023 Apr 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36935151

RESUMO

A spectral library of field induced fragmentation (FIF) spectra for 45 oxygen-containing volatile organic compounds from 5 chemical classes was obtained using tandem differential mobility spectrometry (DMS). Protonated monomers were mobility isolated in a first DMS stage, fragmented with electric fields >10,000 V/cm in a middle (or reactive) stage, and mobility characterized in a second DMS stage. Other spectral libraries were obtained for protonated monomers and for complete mobility spectra from a single DMS stage. Neural networks from Python/Tensorflow software, prepared in-house, and from commercial NeuralWorks Professional II/PLUS were trained to assign spectra into a chemical class. The success at classification was determined for familiar and unfamiliar spectra from these three libraries. Classification test scores were best with FIF spectra with >0.99 for familiar compounds and 0.52 for unfamiliar compounds and were consistent with neural network learning of structural information from fragment ions when compared to other spectral libraries. Radar charts are introduced as measures of classification and as a tool to explore mis-classification. This work shows that ion fragmentation with multi-stage tandem DMS portends molecular identification with the portability and robustness of ambient pressure ion mobility analyzers.

2.
Talanta ; 226: 121944, 2021 May 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33676637

RESUMO

A tandem ion mobility spectrometer was used to mobility isolate ions at the drift time for trinitrotoluene (TNT) in a first mobility stage, remove an interfering compound by ion decomposition in a middle reactive stage, and mobility characterize the remaining TNT ions in a second mobility stage. This sequential processing of ions provided decisive detection of TNT in the presence of an interfering peak differing from TNT in reduced mobility coefficient (Ko) by only 0.02 cm2/V. Even though ions of TNT (as M - 1)- and the interfering compound were more than 90% convolved, TNT could be selectively detected with more than 95% decomposition of the interferent at 123 Td to an ion now separated by ΔKo of 0.2 cm2/V from TNT. Ions for TNT were not decomposed in these electric fields though transmission efficiency was decreased by 20% through a wire grid assembly (the reactive stage). Although tandem ion mobility spectrometry with a reactive stage improves selectivity of measurement in the drift time dimension, the chemistry of ion formation in the ion source is affected still by ion suppression. Response to 1 ng TNT was decreased as much as 30% from 200 ng of interferent deposited on sample trap.

3.
Analyst ; 145(15): 5314-5324, 2020 Aug 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32558851

RESUMO

A planar tandem differential mobility spectrometer was integrated with a middle reactive stage to fragment ions which were mobility selected in a first analyzer stage using characteristic compensation and separation fields. Fragmentation occurred in air at ambient pressure of 660 Torr (8.8 kPa) with electric fields of 10 to 35 kV cm-1 (E/N of 52 to 180 Td) between two 1 mm wide metal strips, located on each analyzer plate between the first and second mobility stages. Field induced fragmentation (FIF) spectra were produced by characterizing, in a last stage, the mobilities of fragment ions from protonated monomers of 43 oxygen-containing volatile organic compounds from five chemical classes. The extent of fragmentation was proportional to E/N with alcohols, aldehydes, and ethers undergoing multiples steps of fragmentation; acetates fragmented only to a single ion, protonated acetic acid. In contrast, fragmentation of ketones occurred only for methyl i-butyl ketone and 2-hexanone. Fragment ion identities were supported by mass-analysis and known fragmentation routes and suggested that field induced fragmentation at ambient pressure can introduce structural information into FIF spectra, establishing a foundation for chemical identification using mobility methods.

4.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 5593, 2019 04 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30944342

RESUMO

The performance of a differential mobility spectrometer was characterized at ambient pressure and ten values of water vapor concentration, from 1.0 × 102 to 1.7 × 104 ppm using a homologous series of seven ketones from acetone to 2-dodecanone. Dispersion plots at 30 °C with separation fields from 35 to 123 Td exhibited increased alpha functions for the hydrated proton, protonated monomers, and proton bound dimers with increased moisture levels. Increases in the level of moisture were accompanied by decreased quantitative response with progressive suppression in the formation of the proton bound dimer first and then protonated monomer. Product ions for 2-octanone at 7 ppb were not observed above a moisture level of 4.0 × 103 ppm, establishing a limit for observation of analyte ion formation. The observation limit increased from 1.1 × 103 ppm for acetone to 5.7 × 103 ppm for 2-dodecanone. These findings demonstrate that ketones can be determined with a differential mobility spectrometry (DMS) analyzer near room temperature in the presence of elevated levels of moisture expected with the use of membrane inlets or headspace sampling of surface or ground waters. Moisture levels entering this DMS analyzer employed as an environmental monitor should be kept at 1.0 × 103 ppm or below and quantitative studies for individual ketones should be made at a fixed moisture level.

5.
Analyst ; 141(15): 4587-98, 2016 Aug 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27227997

RESUMO

Differential mobility spectrometry (DMS) is currently being used for environmental monitoring of space craft atmospheres and has been proposed for the rapid assessment of patients at accident and emergency receptions. Three studies investigated hitherto undescribed complexity in the DMS spectra of methanol, ethanol, propan-1-ol and butan-1-ol product ions formed from a (63)Ni ionisation source. 54 000 DMS spectra obtained over a concentration range of 0.01 mg m(-3)(g) to 1.80 g m(-3)(g) revealed the phenomenon of auto-modification of the product ions. This occurred when the neutral vapour concentration exceeded the level required to induce a neutral-ion collision during the low field portion of the dispersion field waveform. Further, post-ionisation cluster-ion formation or protonated monomer/proton bound dimer inter-conversion within the ion-filter was indicated by apparent shifts in the values of the protonated monomer compensation field maximum; indicative of post-ionisation conversion of the protonated monomer to a proton-bound dimer. APCI-DMS-quadrupole mass spectrometry studies enabled the ion dissociation products from dispersion-field heating to be monitored and product ion fragmentation relationships to be proposed. Methanol was not observed to dissociate, while propan-1-ol and butan-1-ol underwent dissociation reactions consistent with dehydration processes that led ultimately to the generation of what is tentatively assigned as a cyclo-C3H3(+) ion (m/z 39) and hydrated protons. Studies of the interaction of ion filter temperature with dispersion-field heating of product ions isolated dissociation/fragmentation product ions that have not been previously described in DMS. The implications of these combined findings with regard to data sharing and data interpretation were highlighted.

6.
J Breath Res ; 10(1): 017101, 2016 Jan 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26744364

RESUMO

A polydimethylsiloxane oral sampler was used to extract methanol, ethanol, ethylene glycol, 1,3-propandiol and γ-hydroxybutyric acid from samples of human saliva obtained using a passive drool approach. The extracted compounds were recovered by thermal desorption, isolated by gas chromatography and detected with differential mobility spectrometry, operating with a programmed dispersion field. Complex signal behaviours were also observed that were consistent with hitherto unobserved fragmentation behaviours in differential mobility spectrometry. These yielded high-mobility fragments obscured within the envelope of the water-based reactant ion peak. Further, compensation field maxima shifts were also observed which were attributable to transport gas modification phenomena. Nevertheless, the responses obtained indicated that in vivo saliva sampling with thermal desorption gas chromatography may be used to provide a semi-quantitative diagnostic screen over the toxicity threshold concentration ranges of 100 mg dm(-3) to 3 g dm(-3). A candidate method suitable for use in low resource settings for the non-invasive screening of patients intoxicated by alcohols and volatile sedatives has been demonstrated.


Assuntos
Testes Respiratórios/métodos , Etanol/análise , Hidroxibutiratos/análise , Metanol/análise , Saliva/química , Adulto , Cromatografia Gasosa/métodos , Humanos , Masculino , Análise Espectral/métodos
7.
J Chromatogr A ; 1421: 162-70, 2015 Nov 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26427321

RESUMO

Alkyl esters of fatty acids (FAAEs) with carbon numbers from 8 to 20 formed protonated monomers and proton bound dimers through atmospheric pressure chemical ionization reactions and these gas ions were characterized for their field dependent mobility coefficients using differential mobility spectrometry (DMS). Separation of ion peaks with a vapor modifier was achieved for ions with masses of 317-1033 Da though the differences in these coefficients and the resolution of ion peaks decreased proportionally with increased ion mass. Differences in dispersion curves were sufficient to isolate ions from specific FAAEs in the effluent of a gas chromatograph by dual stage ion filtering using a tandem DMS detector. Methyl linolenate was isolated from nearby eluting methyl oleate, methyl stearate and methyl linoleate within analysis times of 10s without measureable complications from charge suppression in the ion source or leakage in filtering of ions with close proximity of dispersion behavior.


Assuntos
Biocombustíveis/análise , Ácidos Graxos/análise , Cromatografia Gasosa/métodos , Ésteres , Gasolina/análise , Ácidos Linolênicos/análise , Análise Espectral
8.
Analyst ; 140(9): 2995-3002, 2015 May 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25803294

RESUMO

Proton-bound dimers were dissociated to protonated monomers in air at ambient pressure and temperature using electric fields of ultrahigh Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometry (ultraFAIMS) with the onset of dissociation for ethyl acetate as 96 Td and for dimethyl methyl phosphonate as 170 Td. Ions then were measured by differential mobility spectrometry (DMS). Fragment ions were formed with propyl acetate at electric fields of 90 Td or greater. The dissociation in ultraFAIMS of ions, with compensation fields near zero, to form smaller ions with new compensation fields, provided a method to improve peak capacity in DMS without gas modifiers. These findings also lay the foundation for a triple stage DMS with a centre stage for ion dissociation or fragmentation.

9.
Analyst ; 140(3): 922-30, 2015 Feb 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25501714

RESUMO

The air quality monitor (AQM), which included a portable gas chromatograph (GC) and a detector was interfaced to a mass spectrometer (MS) by introducing flow from the GC detector to the atmospheric pressure ion source of the MS. This small GC system, with a gas recirculation loop for carrier and detector make-up gases, comprised an inlet to preconcentrate volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in air, a thermal desorber before the GC column, a differential mobility spectrometer (DMS), and another DMS as an atmospheric pressure ionization source for the MS. Return flow to the internally recirculated air system of the AQM's DMS was replenished using purified air. Although ions and unreacted neutral vapors flowed from the detector through Viton® tubing into the source of the MS, ions were not detected in the MS without the auxillary ion source, (63)Ni as in the mobility detector. The GC-DMS-MS instrument provided a 3-D measurement platform (GC, DMS, and MS analysis) to explore the gas composition inside the GC-DMS recirculation loop and provide DMS-MS measurement of the components of a complex VOC mixture with performance significantly enhanced by mass-analysis, either with mass spectral scans or with an extracted ion chromatogram. This combination of a mobility spectrometer and a mass spectrometer was possible as vapors and ions are carried together through the DMS analyzer, thereby preserving the chromatographic separation efficiency. The critical benefit of this instrument concept is that all flows in and through the thoroughly integrated GC-DMS analyzer are kept intact allowing a full measure of the ion and vapor composition in the complete system. Performance has been evaluated using a synthetic air sample and a sample of airborne vapors in a laboratory. Capabilities and performance values are described using results from AQM-MS analysis of purified air, ambient air from a research laboratory in a chemistry building, and a sample of synthetic air of known composition. Quantitative measures of a stand-alone AQM are disclosed for VOCs in the ppb to ppm levels with an average precision of 5.8% RSD and accuracy from 4% to 28% error against a standard method.


Assuntos
Poluentes Atmosféricos/análise , Cromatografia Gasosa/métodos , Gases/análise , Espectrometria de Massas em Tandem/métodos , Compostos Orgânicos Voláteis/análise , Íons
10.
J Occup Environ Hyg ; 9(2): 89-98, 2012.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22239061

RESUMO

The identity and emission rates of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in headspace vapors over electronic components were determined at temperatures from 75 to 200°C using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. The emission of VOCs may provide a basis to detect the onset of the overheating of electronic components in confined atmospheres near electronic bays on airplanes and submarines before smoldering or ignition. VOCs found in headspace vapors over components, including resistors, capacitors, diodes, transistors, and insulation from wires of a transformer, were composed of simple mixtures of substances with 6 to 10 carbon number from chemical families including ketones, aldehydes, substituted benzenes, alcohols, and phenols. Composition of the vapors was characteristic but not exclusive of a particular electrical component, except for phenols and methylstyrene, which were found only in a single component. Emission rates were expressed as nanogram of chemical per gram of component per minute, and increased from a low of 0.001 ng/g-min for nonanal from transformer wire at 100°C to a maximum of 2.5 ng/g-min at 150°C for isophorone from a resistor. Patterns of persistence with repeated sampling of headspace for components at 200°C over 5 hr suggested that VOCs arose from impurities in plastics rather than from thermal decomposition of the polymer.


Assuntos
Equipamentos e Provisões Elétricas , Exposição Ocupacional/análise , Compostos Orgânicos Voláteis/análise , Monitoramento Ambiental , Cromatografia Gasosa-Espectrometria de Massas , Temperatura , Transistores Eletrônicos , Compostos Orgânicos Voláteis/química
11.
Talanta ; 78(4-5): 1464-75, 2009 Jun 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19362218

RESUMO

Ion mobility spectra for a series of mono-substituted toluenes and a series of mono-substituted anilines were obtained using three different methods of atmospheric pressure ionization including photoionization, chemical ionization from a (63)Ni source, and chemical ionization from a corona discharge source. The product ion peak intensities were measured as functions of analyte concentration at 323 K in a purified air atmosphere. Two, and sometimes three, product ion peaks were observed in spectra from chemical ionization with the (63)Ni source and it is suggested that the major peak, due to the protonated molecule, arose in both series by proton transfer from H3O+(H2O)n. The second peak with diminished intensity and longer drift time than the protonated molecule can be seen with the toluenes and was understood to be the NO+ adduct, formed from the reactant ion NO+(H2O)n. Electron transfer from the anilines to the latter ion yields the molecular ions, identified by having the same reduced mobility coefficients as the molecular ions produced by photoionization. The structure of these product ions was determined by investigations using the coupling of ion mobility spectrometry with atmospheric pressure photoionization and mass spectrometry (APPI-IMS-MS). The relative abundances of both the NO+ adducts with the toluenes and the molecular ions with the anilines are enhanced with a corona discharge source where relatively more NO+(H2O)n is produced than in a (63)Ni source. Ab initio calculations show that only the protonated anilines of all the product ions are significantly hydrated with 1 ppm(v) of moisture in the supporting atmosphere of the ion mobility spectrometer.

12.
J Chromatogr A ; 1216(6): 985-93, 2009 Feb 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19118835

RESUMO

The resolving power of a multi-capillary column (MCC) was evaluated using 14 mixtures of volatile organic compounds with known composition and complexity which was incremented stepwise up to 129 constituents. The number of constituents in these mixtures versus the number of components separated and detected with a flame ionization detector showed a proportional rise, with a decreasing slope, to 76 peaks after which a plateau was reached. This was improved 23.7% to 94 constituents, or 73% of all compounds in the mixture, after simplex optimization of carrier gas linear velocity, initial temperature and program rate. When the detection method was differential mobility spectrometry (DMS), additional selectivity was introduced through ion formation and separation. Fifty nine compounds were detected by DMS and 46 were separated by retention time; 13 were co-eluted and 7 of these were resolved by differential ion mobility (90% of all components ionized). A correlation of -0.412 between retention time for gas chromatography (GC) and differential mobility for DMS suggested a significant level of orthogonal character and the method of GC-DMS should not be seen as sequential only.


Assuntos
Cromatografia Gasosa/métodos , Espectrometria de Massas/métodos , Compostos Orgânicos Voláteis/análise , Sensibilidade e Especificidade
13.
J Phys Chem A ; 112(16): 3638-45, 2008 Apr 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18338877

RESUMO

The performance of a planar differential mobility spectrometer (DMS) is investigated when operated in air at ambient pressure and driven by a rectangular asymmetric waveform, limited to frequencies of <1.2 MHz and voltage pulse amplitudes of <1 kV with steep rise times of the order of approximately 15 ns. Independent control of frequency, voltage pulse amplitude, and duty cycle allow for characterizing the DMS in terms of transmission, resolution and separation. The tradeoff between sensitivity and resolution and the effect of duty cycle on instrument performance are demonstrated experimentally. The dependence of ion mobility on the magnitude of the electric field determines the displacement of ions measured by the DC compensation voltage as a function of the duty cycle. Optimum values for the duty cycle exist for the separation of A- and C-type ions, while, B-type ions exhibit a more complex behavior. An analytical expression for describing the effect of duty cycle on the separation of the ions, determined by variations in the compensation voltage, is developed and compared to experimental results obtained in air below 75 Td using estimated alpha parameters for a set of ketones. In this context, errors associated with the calculation of alpha parameters using polynomials of even powers are highlighted.

14.
Appl Spectrosc ; 61(10): 1076-83, 2007 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17958958

RESUMO

A mobility spectrometer was used to characterize gas-phase ions produced from laser ablation of solids in air at 100 degrees C and at ambient pressure with a beam focused to a diameter of

15.
J Am Soc Mass Spectrom ; 18(5): 940-51, 2007 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17376700

RESUMO

Protonated ammonia and hydrazines (MH(+)) form complexes with ketones and the differences in masses and mobilities of the resulting ions, MH(+)(ketone)(n), are sufficient for separation in an ion mobility spectrometer at ambient pressure. The highest mass ion for any of the protonated molecules is obtained when the ketone is present at elevated concentrations in the supporting atmosphere of both the source and drift regions of the spectrometer so that an ion maintains a discrete composition and mobility. The sizes of the ion-molecule complexes were found to depend on the number of H atoms on the protonated nitrogen atom--four for ammonia, three for hydrazine, two for monomethylhydrazine, and one for 1,1-dimethylhydrazine, and the drift times of these ions were proportional to the size of the ion-molecule complex. Unexpected side products, including protonated hydrazones and azines, and associated ketone clusters, were isolated to a single drift tube containing ceramic parts and could not, from CID studies, be attributed to gas-phase ion chemistry. These findings illustrate that mobility resolution of ions in IMS and IMS/MS experiments can be enhanced through chemical modification of the supporting gas atmosphere without changes in the core ion.


Assuntos
Amônia/química , Hidrazinas/química , Cetonas/química , Espectrometria de Massas/métodos , Prótons , Ar , Pressão do Ar
16.
Anal Chim Acta ; 579(1): 1-10, 2006 Oct 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17723720

RESUMO

Differential mobility spectra for alkanes, alcohols, ketones, cycloalkanes, substituted ketones, and substituted benzenes with carbon numbers between 3 and 10 were obtained from gas chromatography-differential mobility spectrometry (GC-DMS) analyses of mixtures in dilute solution. Spectra were produced in a supporting atmosphere of purified air with 0.6-0.8 ppm moisture, gas temperature of 120 degrees C, sample concentrations of approximately 0.2-5 ppm, and ion source of 5 mCi (185 MBq) 63Ni. Multiple spectra were extracted from chromatographic elution profiles for each chemical providing a library of 390 spectra from 39 chemicals. The spectra were analyzed for structural content by chemical family using two different approaches. In the one approach, the wavelet packet transform was used to denoise and deconvolute the DMS data by decomposing each spectrum into its wavelet coefficients, which represent the sample's constituent frequencies. The wavelet coefficients characteristic of the compound's structural class were identified using a genetic algorithm (GA) for pattern recognition analysis. The pattern recognition GA uses both supervised and unsupervised learning to identify coefficients which optimize clustering of the spectra in a plot of the two or three largest principal components of the data. Because principal components maximize variance, the bulk of the information encoded by the selected coefficients is about differences between chemical families in the data set. The principal component analysis routine embedded in the fitness function of the pattern recognition GA acts as an information filter, significantly reducing the size of the search space since it restricts the search to coefficients whose principal component plots show clustering on the basis of chemical family. In a second approach, a back propagation neural network was trained to categorize spectra by chemical families and the network was successfully tested using familiar and unfamiliar chemicals. Performance of the network was associated with a region of the spectrum associated with fragment ions which could be extracted from spectra and were class specific.

17.
Anal Chem ; 76(21): 390A-397A, 2004 Nov 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15551477
18.
Anal Chem ; 76(17): 4937-44, 2004 Sep 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15373426

RESUMO

Differential mobility spectrometry (DMS) of nitro-organic explosives and related compounds exhibited the expected product ions of M- or M x NO2- from atmospheric pressure chemical ionization reactions in purified air at 100 degrees C. Peaks in the differential mobility spectra for these ions were confined to a narrow range of compensation voltages between -1 to +3 V which arose through a low dependence of mobility for the ions in electric fields at E/N values between 0 and 120 Td (1 Td = 10(-17) V cm2). The field dependence of ions, described as an alpha parameter, ranged from -0.005 to 0.02 at a separation field of 100 Td. The alpha parameter could be controlled through the addition of organic vapors into the drift gas and was increased to 0.08-0.24 with 1000 ppm of methylene chloride in the drift gas. This modification of the drift gas resulted in compensation voltages of +3 to +21 V for peaks. The improved separation of peaks was consistent with a model of ion characterization by DeltaK or Kl - Kh, where Kl is the mobility coefficient of ions clustered with vapor neutrals during the low-field portion of the separation field waveform and Kh is for the same core ion when heated and declustered during the high-field portion of waveform.

19.
Analyst ; 129(4): 297-304, 2004 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15042159

RESUMO

Chlorocarbons were ionized through gas phase chemistry at ambient pressure in air and resultant ions were characterized using a micro-fabricated drift tube with differential mobility spectrometry (DMS). Positive and negative product ions were characterized simultaneously in a single drift tube equipped with a 3 mCi (63)Ni ion source at 50 degrees C and drift gas of air with 1 ppm moisture. Scans of compensation voltage for most chlorocarbons produced differential mobility spectra with Cl(-) as the sole product ion and a few chlorocarbons produced adduct ions, M (.-) Cl(-). Detection limits were approximately 20-80 pg for gas chromatography-DMS measurements. Chlorocarbons also yielded positive ions through chemical ionization in air and differential mobility spectra showed peaks with characteristic compensation voltages for each substance. Field dependence of mobility was determined for positive and negative ions of each substance and confirmed characteristic behavior for each ion. A DMS analyzer with a membrane inlet was used to continuously monitor effluent from columns of bentonite or synthetic silica beads to determine breakthrough volumes of individual chlorocarbons. These findings suggest a potential of DMS for monitoring subsurface environments either on site or perhaps in situ.


Assuntos
Hidrocarbonetos Clorados/análise , Poluentes Químicos da Água/análise , Monitoramento Ambiental/instrumentação , Monitoramento Ambiental/métodos , Espectrometria de Massas/instrumentação , Espectrometria de Massas/métodos
20.
J Phys Chem A ; 107(19): 3648-54, 2003 May 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12830828

RESUMO

The electric field dependence of the mobilities of gas-phase protonated monomers [(MH+(H2O)n] and proton-bound dimers [M2H+(H2O)n] of organophosphorus compounds was determined at E/N values between 0 and 140 Td at ambient pressure in air with moisture between 0.1 and 15 000 ppm. Field dependence was described as alpha (E/N) and was obtained from the measurements of compensation voltage versus field amplitude in a planar high-field asymmetric waveform ion mobility spectrometer. The alpha function for protonated monomers to 140 Td was constant from 0.1 to 10 ppm moisture in air with onset of effect at approximately 50 ppm. The value of alpha increased 2-fold from 100 to 1000 ppm at all E/N values. At moisture values between 1000 and 10 000 ppm, a 2-fold or more increase in alpha (E/N) was observed. In a model proposed here, field dependence for mobility through changes in collision cross sections is governed by the degree of solvation of the protonated molecule by neutral molecules. The process of ion declustering at high E/N values was consistent with the kinetics of ion-neutral collisional periods, and the duty cycle of the waveform applied to the drift tube. Water was the principal neutral above 50 ppm moisture in air, and nitrogen was proposed as the principal neutral below 50 ppm.


Assuntos
Eletricidade , Monitoramento Ambiental/instrumentação , Compostos Organofosforados/análise , Prótons , Água/química , Fenômenos Químicos , Físico-Química , Cromatografia Gasosa , Monitoramento Ambiental/métodos , Íons , Espectrometria de Massas/instrumentação
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