4.5 Article

Flying Cages in Traveling Wave Ion Mobility: Influence of the Instrumental Parameters on the Topology of the Host-Guest Complexes

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s13361-017-1816-7

Keywords

Supramolecular chemistry; Ion mobility; Collision-induced dissociation; Cucurbituril

Funding

  1. European Commission/Region Wallonne (FEDER - BIORGEL project)
  2. Interuniversity Attraction Pole program of the Belgian Federal Science Policy Office
  3. Programme d'Excellence de la Region Wallonne (OPTI2MAT project)
  4. Consortium des Equipments de Calcul Intensif (CECI)
  5. Fonds de la Recherche Scientifique de Belgique (F.R.S.-FNRS) [2.5020.11]
  6. FRS-FNRS
  7. UMONS
  8. ULg
  9. European Regional Development Fund of the Walloon region
  10. ARC program
  11. Interreg program
  12. UIAP program
  13. [PAI 7/05]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Supramolecular mass spectrometry has emerged in the last decade as an orthogonal method to access, at the molecular level, the structures of noncovalent complexes extracted from the condensed phase to the rarefied gas phase using electrospray ionization. It is often considered that the soft nature of the ESI source confers to the method the capability to generate structural data comparable to those in the condensed phase. In the present paper, using the ammonium ion/cucurbituril combination as a model system, we investigate using ion mobility and computational chemistry the influence of the instrumental parameters on the topology, i.e., internal versus external association, of gaseous host/guest complex ions. MS and theoretical data are confronted to condensed phase data derived from nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to assess whether the instrumental parameters can play an insidious role when trying to derive condensed phase data from mass spectrometry results.

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