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Frequency Dependence of Alternating Current Electrospray Ionization Mass Spectrometry
32
Citations
19
References
2011
Year
EngineeringIon Mobility SpectrometryChemistryIon ProcessAnalytical InstrumentationAnalytical ChemistryBiostatisticsInstrumentationScaling LawBiophysicsIon ExchangePh ModulationElectrochemistryIon MobilityNatural SciencesSpectroscopyBioelectronicsMass SpectrometryElectrophysiologyFrequency DependenceIon StructureElectrical Mobility
The novel effects resulting from the entrainment of low mobility ions during alternating current (ac) electrospray ionization are examined through mass spectrometry and voltage/current measurements. Curious phenomena such as pH modulation at high frequencies (>150 kHz) of an applied ac electric field are revealed and explained using simple mechanistic arguments. Current measurements are utilized to supplement these observations, and a simplified one-dimensional transient diffusion model for charge transport is used to arrive at a scaling law that provides better insight into the ac electrospray ionization process. Moreover, because of the different pathway for ion formation in comparison to direct current (dc) electrospray, ac electrospray (at frequencies >250 kHz) is shown to reduce the effects of ionization suppression in a mixture of two molecules with different surface activities.
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Are the electrospray mass spectra of proteins related to their aqueous solution chemistry? Roger Guevremont, K. W. Michael Siu, J. C. Yves Le Blanc, Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry Biological Mass SpectrometryMolecular BiologyEnvironmental ChemistryAnalytical InstrumentationBioanalysis | 1992 | 133 |
1972 | 121 |
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