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2007 Prada Ion-mobility study of two functionalized pentacene structural isomers using a modified electrospray/triple quadrupole mass spectrometer
Ionmobility study of two functionalized pentacene structural isomers using a modified electrospraytriple quadrupole mass spectrometer
International Journal of Mass Spectrometry 261 (1), 45 (2007)
We report ion-mobility measurements with a modified triple quadrupole mass spectrometer fitted with an ion molecule reactor (IMR) designed to investigate ion molecule reactivity in organic mass spectrometry. Functionalized pentacene ions, which are generally unreactive were chosen for study to decouple drift/diffusion effects from reactivity (including clustering). The IMR is equipped with a variable axial electrostatic drift field (ADF) and is able to trap ions. These capabilities were successfully employed in the measurement of ion mobilities in different modes of IMR operation. Theoretical modeling of the drift dynamics and the special localization of the large ion packet was successfully implemented. The contribution of the quadrupole RF field to the drift dynamics also was taken into consideration.
 
2002, Lee, Hoaglund, ClemmerDevelopment of high-throughput lquid chromatography injected ion mobility quadrupole time-of-flight techniques for analysis of complex peptide mixtures
Development of highthroughput liquid chromatography injected ion mobility quadrupole timeofflight techniques for analysis of complex peptide mixtures
Journal of Chromatography B 782 (1-2), 343 (2002)
The development of a multidimensional approach involving high-performance liquid chromatography (LC), ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) and tandem mass spectrometry is described for the analysis of complex peptide mixtures. In this approach, peptides are separated based on differences in their LC retention times and mobilities (as ions drift through He) prior to being introduced into a quadrupole/octopole/time-of-flight mass spectrometer. The initial LC separation and IMS dispersion of ions is used to label ions for subsequent fragmentation studies that are carried out for mixtures of ions. The approach is demonstrated by examining a mixture of peptides generated from tryptic digestion of 18 commercially available proteins. Current limitations of this initial study and potential advantages of the experimental approach are discussed.
 
2002 Matz Hill Two-dimensional separations with electrospray ionization ambient pressure high-resolution ion mobility spectrometry/quadrupole mass spectrometry
Twodimensional separations with electrospray ionization ambient pressure highresolution ion mobility spectrometryquadrupole mass spectrometry
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry 16 (7), 670 (2002)
Abstract The coupling of ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) instruments with mass spectrometers has been described since early in IMS development, most commonly with quadrupole mass analyzers. The recent development of IMS with time-of-flight (TOF) instruments has demonstrated that the time compatibility (IMS milliseconds and TOFMS microseconds) of the two techniques enables rapid two-dimensional separations to be performed, theoretically in the order of seconds for a complete analysis. This study presents a unique way to operate a traditional IMS/QMS system to attain separations similar to those achieved with IMS/TOF. For this new approach, the quadrupole was slowly scanned in the single-ion monitoring mode while IMS spectra were continually embedded in each m/z step. In this way, two-dimensional separations (IMS drift times and m/z) were obtained using the traditional IMS/QMS arrangement. An example of a five amino acid separation (quadrupole scan of 40 m/z values at a rate of 7 steps/min) led to a complete two-dimensional analysis within 6 min, comparable to rapid chromatographic separations with mass spectrometry. Proposed approaches to reduce the analysis time are discussed and a reduction in the analysis time to less than 1 min is feasible when the IMS/QMS separation conditions are optimized.
 
2001 Clowers Hill Evaluation of sulfonylurea herbicides using high resolution esi im qms
Evaluation of sulfonylurea herbicides using high resolution electrospray ionization ion mobility quadrupole mass spectrometry
Field Analytical Chemistry & Technology 5 (6), 302 (2001)
Keywords Ion Mobility Spectrometry (IMS); Electrospray Ionizations (ESI); pesticides; sulfonylurea; herbicides Abstract The purpose of the current study was to explore and assess the potential of high resolution electrospray ionization atmospheric pressure ion mobility spectrometry (ESI-AP-IMS) as a field analytical method for the detection and identification of mixtures of sulfonylurea (SU) herbicides in aqueous samples. Because of increased usage, persistent behavior, and potential for crop damage, an environmental method of analysis capable of evaluating SU herbicides in a swift and effective manner is necessary. Eight SU herbicides were evaluated using ESI-AP-IMS quadrupole mass spectrometry. The selected herbicides were chosen based upon availability and scope of use. The SU herbicide species were qualitatively identified using quadrupole mass spectrometry, followed by the determination of reduced mobility values for characteristic ions. Various mixtures of rimsulfuron, metsulfuron-methyl, prosulfuron, sulfometuron-methyl, tribenuron-methyl, and primisulfuron-methyl could be revealed using AP-IMS. The ease of use, ability to operate under ambient conditions, and relatively rapid data acquisition times make ESI-AP-IMS an attractive candidate for the analysis of aqueous environmental field samples. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Field Analyt Chem Technol 5: 302-312, 2001; DOI 10.1002/fact.10010
 
2007, Kaur-Atwal, Analysis of tryptic peptides using desorption electrospray ionisation combined with ion mobility spectrometry/mass spectrometry.
Analysis of tryptic peptides using desorption electrospray ionisation combined with ion mobility spectrometrymass spectrometry
Gushinder Kaur-Atwal et al.
Rapid communications in mass spectrometry : RCM 21 (7), 1131-8 (2007)
A novel method is reported for rapid protein identification by the analysis of tryptic peptides using desorption electrospray ionisation (DESI) coupled with hyphenated ion mobility spectrometry and quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry (IMS/Q-ToF-MS). Confident protein identification is demonstrated for the analysis of tryptically digested bovine serum albumin (BSA), with no sample pre-treatment or clean-up. Electrophoretic ion mobility separation of ions generated by DESI allowed examination of charge-state and mobility distributions for tryptic peptide mixtures. Selective interrogation of singly charged ions allowed isobaric peptide responses to be distinguished, along with a reduction in spectral noise. The mobility-selected singly charged peptide responses were presented as a pseudo-peptide mass fingerprint (p-PMF) for protein database searching. Comparative data are shown for electrospray ionisation (ESI) of the BSA digest, without sample clean-up, from which confident protein identification could not be made. Implications for the robustness of the DESI method, together with potential insights into mechanisms for DESI of proteolytic digests, are discussed. Copyright (c) 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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