4.6 Article

Ionization of Volatile Organics and Nonvolatile Biomolecules Directly from a Titanium Slab for Mass Spectrometric Analysis

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 26, Issue 22, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules26226760

Keywords

titanium; ESI; APCI; nonpolar; volatile; ambient ionization

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology of Taiwan (MOST) [108-2113-M-009-018-MY3]

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ASAI is a new atmospheric surface-assisted ionization method that can ionize both polar and non-polar analytes. By placing samples with high vapor pressure under a titanium slab near the inlet of the mass spectrometer, analytes can be readily ionized and detected.
Atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI)-mass spectrometry (MS) and electrospray ionization (ESI)-MS can cover the analysis of analytes from low to high polarities. Thus, an ion source that possesses these two ionization functions is useful. Atmospheric surface-assisted ionization (ASAI), which can be used to ionize polar and nonpolar analytes in vapor, liquid, and solid forms, was demonstrated in this study. The ionization of analytes through APCI or ESI was induced from the surface of a metal substrate such as a titanium slab. ASAI is a contactless approach operated at atmospheric pressure. No electric contacts nor any voltages were required to be applied on the metal substrate during ionization. When placing samples with high vapor pressure in condensed phase underneath a titanium slab close to the inlet of the mass spectrometer, analytes can be readily ionized and detected by the mass spectrometer. Furthermore, a sample droplet (~2 mu L) containing high-polarity analytes, including polar organics and biomolecules, was ionized using the titanium slab. One titanium slab is sufficient to induce the ionization of analytes occurring in front of a mass spectrometer applied with a high voltage. Moreover, this ionization method can be used to detect high volatile or polar analytes through APCI-like or ESI-like processes, respectively.

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