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1.
J Am Soc Mass Spectrom ; 35(6): 1128-1137, 2024 Jun 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38523556

ABSTRACT

Proton-transfer reactions are commonplace during electrospray ionization (ESI) mass spectrometry experiments and are often responsible for imparting charge to analyte molecules. Multiple protonation-site isomers (protomers) can arise for polyfunctional molecules and these isomers can interconvert via solvent-mediated proton transfer reactions during various stages of the ESI process. Studying the populations and interconversion of protonation isomers provides key insight into the ESI process, ion-molecule interactions, and ion dissociation mechanisms. An archetype molecule to study protomer interconversion fundamentals in this context is para-aminobenzoic acid (pABA), where both the amino and carboxylic acid protomers are typically formed under ESI and the mechanisms for interconversion are still under refinement. Using ion-trap mass spectrometry reaction kinetics (2.5 mTorr, 300 K), this study examines gas-phase interconversion catalysis of pABA protomers by seven neutral species, which are commen solvents and additives used for ESI: water, formic acid, methanol, ethanol, propanol, ammonia, and acetonitrile. Three distinct reaction cases are reported: (i) formic acid, methanol, ethanol, propanol, and ammonia each catalyze the interconversion between the amino and carboxylic acid protomers via a n = 1 solvent-molecule vehicle mechanism; (ii) for water, however, a n = 6 adduct complex is detected and this suggests that the observed protomer interconversion occurs through a Grotthuss mechanism, in accord with literature reports; (iii) acetonitrile inhibits proton transfer by the formation of particularly stable n = 1 and 2 adduct complexes. The second-order rate constants for the protomer interconversion are observed to increase in the following order: H2O < HCO2H < MeOH < EtOH < PrOH < NH3. Potential energy schemes are reported for all neutral-catalyzed proton transfer reactions using the DSD-PBEP86-D3(BJ)/aug-cc-pVDZ level of theory. A central transition state, which connects the protonation site adducts, is shown to be the key rate-limiting step. The energy of this transition state is sensitive to the proton affinity of the neutral solvent, and this is supported by the correlation between the reaction rate and the solvent proton affinity.

2.
J Phys Chem A ; 128(2): 413-419, 2024 Jan 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38174881

ABSTRACT

In the gas-phase chemistry of the atmosphere and automotive fuel combustion, peroxyl radical intermediates are formed following O2 addition to carbon-centered radicals which then initiate a complex network of radical reactions that govern the oxidative processing of hydrocarbons. The rapid association of the phenyl radical-a fundamental radical related to benzene-with O2 has hitherto been modeled as a barrierless process, a common assumption for peroxyl radical formation. Here, we provide an alternate explanation for the kinetics of this reaction by deploying double-hybrid density functional theory (DFT), at the DSD-PBEP86-D3(BJ)/aug-cc-pVTZ level of theory, and locate a submerged adiabatic transition state connected to a prereaction complex along the reaction entrance pathway. Using this potential energy scheme, experimental rate coefficients k(T) for the addition of O2 to the phenyl radical are accurately reproduced within a microcanonical kinetic model. This work highlights that purportedly barrierless radical oxidation reactions may instead be modeled using stationary points, which in turn provides insight into pressure and temperature dependence.

3.
J Org Chem ; 89(3): 1836-1845, 2024 Feb 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38226655

ABSTRACT

A regioselective visible-light-mediated denitrogenative alkene insertion of 1,2,3-benzotriazin-4(3H)-ones was developed to access 3-substituted isoindolinones, an important structural motif present in many biologically active molecules and natural products. Notably, divergent reactivity was achieved by switching from reported nickel catalysis (where C3-substituted 3,4-dihydroisoquinolin-1(2H)-ones form) to photocatalysis, where photocatalytic denitrogenation and a subsequent nitrogen-mediated hydrogen atom shift lead to exclusive 3-substituted isoindolinone formation. The developed photocatalytic reaction is compatible with activated terminal alkenes and cyclic α,ß-unsaturated esters and ketones, with wide functional group tolerance for N-substitution of the 1,2,3-benzotriazin-4(3H)-ones. The utility of this procedure is highlighted by a gram-scale synthesis and postsynthetic amidation. To understand the origin of this unique product selectivity, experimental and computational mechanistic studies were performed.

4.
Anal Chem ; 95(42): 15472-15476, 2023 Oct 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37830912

ABSTRACT

An experimental platform is reported that allows for the online characterization of photochemical reactions by coupling a continuous flow photoreactor, equipped with LED light irradiation and a dual-tipped ESI source, directly to a mass spectrometer with electrospray ionization. The capabilities of this platform are demonstrated with two classes of photoreactions: (1) the photopolymerization of methyl methacrylate and (2) photocatalyzed alkyne insertion into a 1,2,3-benzotriazinone. The online technique provides rapid information to inform the underlying photochemical mechanism and evaluate the overall photochemistry.

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(28): 15024-15029, 2023 Jul 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37339086

ABSTRACT

Through a combination of ion-mobility filtering and laser-equipped quadrupole ion-trap mass spectrometry, the gas-phase reaction kinetics of two protonation isomers of the distonic-radical quinazoline cation are independently measured with ethylene. For these radical addition reactions, protonation site variations drive significant changes in nearby radical reactivity, and this is primarily due to through-space electrostatic effects. Furthermore, quantum chemical methods specifically designed for calculating long-range interactions, such as double-hybrid density functional theory, are required to rationalize the experimentally measured difference in reactivity.

6.
J Am Soc Mass Spectrom ; 34(7): 1428-1435, 2023 Jul 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37288560

ABSTRACT

Electrospray ionization (ESI) is used to deliver analytes for mass analysis across a huge range of mass spectrometry applications. Despite its ubiquitous application and many mechanistic investigations, it remains that a fundamental understanding of ESI processes is not complete. In particular, all the factors that influence the populations of protonation isomers are elusive such that it remains a challenge to optimize experimental conditions to favor one isomer over another. The molecule para-aminobenzoic acid has emerged as an archetype for the study of protonation isomers, with both amino and carboxylic acid protonation site isomers (protomers) typically formed upon ESI, with the isomer ratio shown to be sensitive to several physical and chemical parameters. Here we report an ion-trap mass spectrometry study of the time-resolved methanol-catalyzed proton transfer between the amine and carboxylic acid moieties of para-aminobenzoic acid. The experimental and computational results presented are consistent with a bimolecular mechanism where isomerization is mediated by a single methanol rather than a multimolecular Grotthuss proton transfer process. Pseudo-first-order rate constants for protomer specific product ions are reported and confirm the depletion of the amino protomer is correlated to the growth of the carboxylic acid protomer. Under the controlled conditions of a low-pressure ion-trap mass spectrometer (2.5 mTorr, 300 K), the number of methanol molecules required to isomerize para-aminobenzoic acid is determined to be one, and the second-order rate constant for methanol-catalyzed isomerization is (1.9 ± 0.1) × 10-11 cm3 molecule-1 s-1. The para-aminobenzoic acid vehicle mechanism is explored computationally at the DSD-PBEP86-D3BJ/aug-cc-pVDZ level of theory and reveals that the transition state for proton transfer is submerged (-10 kJ mol-1) relative to the separated reactant energies. The findings from this paper show that single-solvent catalyzed intramolecular proton transfer reactions are possible and must be considered during the late stages of ESI to predict the site(s) of protonation and the ion's stability in the presence of solvent molecules.

7.
Anal Chem ; 94(50): 17494-17503, 2022 12 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36473074

ABSTRACT

Here we report the development and optimization of a mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) platform that combines an atmospheric-pressure matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization platform with plasma postionization (AP-MALDI-PPI) and trapped ion mobility spectrometry (TIMS). We discuss optimal parameters for operating the source, characterize the behavior of a variety of lipid classes in positive- and negative-ion modes, and explore the capabilities for lipid imaging using murine brain tissue. The instrument generates high signal-to-noise for numerous lipid species, with mass spectra sharing many similarities to those obtained using laser postionization (MALDI-2). The system is especially well suited for detecting lipids such as phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), as well as numerous sphingolipid classes and glycerolipids. For the first time, the coupling of plasma-based postionization with ion mobility is presented, and we show the value of ion mobility for the resolution and identification of species within rich spectra that contain numerous isobaric/isomeric signals that are not resolved in the m/z dimension alone, including isomeric PE and demethylated phosphatidylcholine lipids produced by in-source fragmentation. The reported instrument provides a powerful and user-friendly approach for MSI of lipids.


Subject(s)
Diagnostic Imaging , Sphingolipids , Mice , Animals , Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization/methods , Brain , Phosphatidylcholines
10.
J Chem Phys ; 157(13): 134305, 2022 Oct 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36209023

ABSTRACT

The first ππ* transition for protonated 2-, 3-, and 4-formylpyridine (FPH+) (m/z 108) is investigated by mass spectrometry coupled with photodissociation action spectroscopy at room temperature and 10 K. The photoproduct ions are detected over 35 000-43 000 cm-1, and the major product channel for 3-FPH+ and 4-FPH+ is the loss of CO forming protonated pyridine at m/z 80. For 2-FPH+, the CO loss product is present but a more abundant photoproduct arises from the loss of CH2O to form m/z 78. Plausible potential energy pathways that lead to dissociation are mapped out and comparisons are made to products arising from collision-induced dissociation. Although, in all cases, the elimination of CO is the overwhelming thermodynamically preferred pathway, the protonated 2-FPH+ results suggest that the CH2O product is kinetically driven and competitive with CO loss. In addition, for each isomer, radical photoproduct ions are detected at lower abundances. SCS-CC2/aug-cc-pVTZ Franck-Condon simulations assist with the assignment of vibrionic structure and adiabatic energies (0-0) for 2-FPH+ at 36 560 cm-1, 37 430 cm-1 for 3-FPH+, and 36 140 cm-1 for 4-FPH+, yielding an accurate prediction, on average, within 620 cm-1.


Subject(s)
Pyridines , Ions/chemistry , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Spectrum Analysis
11.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 58(68): 9451-9467, 2022 Aug 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35938922

ABSTRACT

The separation and detection of isomers remains a challenge for many areas of mass spectrometry. This article highlights laser photodissociation and ion mobility strategies that have been recently deployed to meet this challenge with focus on small molecule isomers including protonation isomers, structural isomers, conformation isomers and new studies emerging on chiral isomers. Laser techniques span UV and visible laser photodissociation, time-resolved pump-probe schemes and application of laser hole-burning arrangements to assign isomers within selected ion populations. Also surveyed are applications of ion mobility strategies to separate isomers followed by laser spectroscopic techniques to assign the separated ions. Ultimately, with ongoing refinement in hardware and methods, there are clear pathways forward for laser and mass spectrometry techniques to make decisive breakthroughs in understanding how isomeric details affect biological processes, physiology and disease.


Subject(s)
Lasers , Ions/chemistry , Isomerism , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Spectrum Analysis
12.
Faraday Discuss ; 238(0): 475-490, 2022 Oct 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35822523

ABSTRACT

Gas phase ion-molecule reactions are central to chemical processes across many environments. A feature of many of these reactions is an inverse relationship between temperature and reaction rate arising from a submerged barrier (an early reaction barrier that is below the energy of the separated reactants), which often arises due to a stable pre-reactive complex. While the thermodynamics and kinetics of many ion-molecule reactions have been extensively modelled, the reaction kinetics of ion-molecule reactions involving radical ions are less explored. In this investigation, the target reactions involve distonic radical ions, where the charge and radical moieties are separated within the molecular structure. Experimental rate coefficients for the reaction of either C2H2 or C2H4 with a suite of eighteen distonic radical ions are reported. Rate coefficients are modelled using potential energy schemes combined with a statistical reaction-rate (RRKM-ME) model. Second-order rate coefficients are in good agreement with experimental values with an average RMS deviation of 37% across three orders of magnitude. These predictions are generally sensitive to the relative energetics of the pre-reactive complex forward transition state but are relatively insensitive to the overall exothermicity of the covalent-addition product.

13.
Anal Chem ; 94(9): 3897-3903, 2022 03 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35201768

ABSTRACT

Gas-phase ion-molecule reactions provide structural insights across a range of analytical applications. A hindrance to the wider use of ion-molecule reactions is that they are relatively slow compared to other ion activation modalities and can thereby impose a bottleneck on the time required to analyze each sample. Here we describe a method for accelerating the rate of ion-molecule reactions involving ozone, implemented by supplementary RF-activation of mass-selected ions within a linear ion trap. Reaction rate accelerations between 15-fold (for ozonolysis of alkenes in ionised lipids) and 90-fold (for ozonation of halide anions) are observed compared to thermal conditions. These enhanced reaction rates with ozone increase sample throughput, aligning the reaction time with the overall duty cycle of the mass spectrometer. We demonstrate that the acceleration is due to the supplementary RF-activation surmounting the activation barrier energy of the entrance channel of the ion-molecule reaction. This rate acceleration is subsequently shown to aid identification of new, low abundance lipid isomers and enables an equivalent increase in the number of lipid species that can be analyzed.


Subject(s)
Ozone , Anions/chemistry , Ions , Isomerism , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Ozone/chemistry
14.
J Am Soc Mass Spectrom ; 33(2): 347-354, 2022 Feb 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35014802

ABSTRACT

Understanding how neutral molecules become protonated during positive-ion electrospray ionization (ESI) mass spectrometry is critically important to ensure analytes can be efficiently ionized, detected, and unambiguously identified. The ESI solvent is one of several parameters that can alter the dominant site of protonation in polyfunctional molecules and thus, in turn, can significantly change the collision-induced dissociation (CID) mass spectra relied upon for compound identification. Ciprofloxacin─a common fluoroquinolone antibiotic─is one such example whereby positive-ion ESI can result in gas-phase [M + H]+ ions protonated at either the keto-oxygen or the piperazine-nitrogen. Here, we demonstrate that these protonation isomers (or protomers) of ciprofloxacin can be resolved by differential ion mobility spectrometry and give rise to distinctive CID mass spectra following both charge-directed and charge-remote mechanisms. Interaction of mobility-selected protomers with methanol vapor (added via the throttle gas supply) was found to irreversibly convert the piperazine N-protomer to the keto-O-protomer. This methanol-mediated proton-transport catalysis is driven by the overall exothermicity of the reaction, which is computed to favor the O-protomer by 93 kJ mol-1 (in the gas phase). Conversely, gas phase interactions of mobility-selected ions with acetonitrile vapor selectively depletes the N-protomer ion signal as formation of stable [M + H + CH3CN]+ cluster ions skews the apparent protomer population ratio, as the O-protomer is unaffected. These findings provide a mechanistic basis for tuning protomer populations to ensure faithful characterization of multifunctional molecules by tandem mass spectrometry.

15.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 12(49): 11939-11944, 2021 Dec 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34878800

ABSTRACT

Iodinate anions are important in the chemistry of the atmosphere where they are implicated in ozone depletion and particle formation. The atmospheric chemistry of iodine is a complex overlay of neutral-neutral, ion-neutral, and photochemical processes, where many of the reactions and intermediates remain poorly characterized. This study targets the visible spectroscopy and photostability of the gas-phase hypoiodite anion (IO-), the initial product of the I- + O3 reaction, by mass spectrometry equipped with resonance-enhanced photodissociation and total ion-loss action spectroscopies. It is shown that IO- undergoes photodissociation to I- + O (3P) over 637-459 nm (15700-21800 cm-1) because of excitation to the bound first singlet excited state. Electron photodetachment competes with photodissociation above the electron detachment threshold of IO- at 521 nm (19200 cm-1) with peaks corresponding to resonant autodetachment involving the singlet excited state and the ground state of neutral IO possibly mediated by a dipole-bound state.

16.
J Chem Phys ; 155(18): 184302, 2021 Nov 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34773941

ABSTRACT

Certain chemical groups give rise to characteristic excited-state deactivation mechanisms. Here, we target the role of a protonated N-N chemical group in the excited-state deactivation of protonated indazole by comparison to its isomer that lacks this group, protonated benzimidazole. Gas-phase protonated indazole and protonated benzimidazole ions are investigated at room temperature using picosecond laser pump-probe photodissociation experiments in a linear ion-trap. Excited state lifetimes are measured across a range of pump energies (4.0-5.4 eV). The 1ππ* lifetimes of protonated indazole range from 390 ± 70 ps using 4.0 eV pump energy to ≤18 ps using 4.6 eV pump energy. The 1ππ* lifetimes of protonated benzimidazole are systematically longer, ranging from 3700 ± 1100 ps at 4.6 eV pump energy to 400 ± 200 ps at 5.4 eV. Based on these experimental results and accompanying quantum chemical calculations and potential energy surfaces, the shorter lifetimes of protonated indazole are attributed to πσ* state mediated elongation of the protonated N-N bond.

17.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 23(27): 14913-14924, 2021 Jul 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34223848

ABSTRACT

Gas-phase reactions of the o-methylphenyl (o-CH3C6H4) radical with the C3H4 isomers allene (H2C[double bond, length as m-dash]C[double bond, length as m-dash]CH2) and propyne (HC[triple bond, length as m-dash]C-CH3) are studied at 600 K and 4 Torr (533 Pa) using VUV synchrotron photoionisation mass spectrometry, quantum chemical calculations and RRKM modelling. Two major dissociation product ions arise following C3H4 addition: m/z 116 (CH3 loss) and 130 (H loss). These products correspond to small polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). The m/z 116 signal for both reactions is conclusively assigned to indene (C9H8) and is the dominant product for the propyne reaction. Signal at m/z 130 for the propyne case is attributed to isomers of bicyclic methylindene (C10H10) + H, which contains a newly-formed methylated five-membered ring. The m/z 130 signal for allene, however, is dominated by the 1,2-dihydronaphthalene isomer arising from a newly created six-membered ring. Our results show that new ring formation from C3H4 addition to the methylphenyl radical requires an ortho-CH3 group - similar to o-methylphenyl radical oxidation. These reactions characteristically lead to bicyclic aromatic products, but the structure of the C3H4 co-reactant dictates the structure of the PAH product, with allene preferentially leading to the formation of two six-membered ring bicyclics and propyne resulting in the formation of six and five-membered bicyclic structures.

18.
Anal Chem ; 93(22): 8091-8098, 2021 06 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34019383

ABSTRACT

The nitrile imine-mediated tetrazole-ene cycloaddition is a widely used class of photoligation. Optimizing the reaction outcome requires detailed knowledge of the tetrazole photoactivation profile, which can only partially be ascertained from absorption spectroscopy, or otherwise involves laborious reaction monitoring in solution. Photodissociation action spectroscopy (PDAS) combines the advantages of optical spectroscopy and mass spectrometry in that only absorption events resulting in a mass change are recorded, thus revealing the desired wavelength dependence of product formation. Moreover, the sensitivity and selectivity afforded by the mass spectrometer enable reliable assessment of the photodissociation profile even on small amounts of crude material, thus accelerating the design and synthesis of next-generation substrates. Using this workflow, we demonstrate that the photodissociation onset for nitrile imine formation is red-shifted by ca. 50 nm with a novel N-ethylcarbazole derivative relative to a phenyl-substituted archetype. Benchmarked against solution-phase tunable laser experiments and supported by quantum chemical calculations, these discoveries demonstrate that PDAS is a powerful tool for rapidly screening the efficacy of new substrates in the quest toward efficient visible light-triggered ligation for biological applications.


Subject(s)
Imines , Lasers , Cycloaddition Reaction , Mass Spectrometry , Spectrum Analysis
19.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(5): 2331-2339, 2021 02 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33427467

ABSTRACT

The low-lying electronic states of Irgacure 2959, a Norrish-type I photoinitiator, complexed with a single metal cation are investigated in the gas phase by photodissociation action spectroscopy. Analysis of the band shifts using quantum chemical calculations (TD-DFT and SCS-CC2) reveals the underlying influence of the charge on the key electronic energy levels. Since the cations (H+, Li+, Na+, K+, Zn2+, Ca2+, and Mg2+) bind at varying distances, the magnitude of the electric field at the center of the chromophore due to the cation is altered, and this shifts the electronic states by different amounts. Photodissociation action spectra of cation-Irg complexes show that absorption transitions to the first 1ππ* state are red-shifted with a magnitude proportional to the electric field strength (with red shifts >1 eV), and in most cases, the cation is essentially acting as a point charge. Calculations show that a neighboring 3nπ* state, a key state for the α-cleavage pathway, is destabilized (blue-shifted) by the orientated electric field. As such, if the 1ππ*-3nπ* energy gap is reduced, increased intersystem crossing rates are expected, resulting in higher yields of the desired radical photoproducts, and this is controlled by the orientated electric field arising from the cation.

20.
J Am Soc Mass Spectrom ; 32(2): 537-547, 2021 Feb 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33444019

ABSTRACT

A key step in gas-phase polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) formation involves the addition of acetylene (or other alkyne) to σ-type aromatic radicals, with successive additions yielding more complex PAHs. A similar process can happen for N-containing aromatics. In cold diffuse environments, such as the interstellar medium, rates of radical addition may be enhanced when the σ-type radical is charged. This paper investigates the gas-phase ion-molecule reactions of acetylene with nine aromatic distonic σ-type radical cations derived from pyridinium (Pyr), anilinium (Anl), and benzonitrilium (Bzn) ions. Three isomers are studied in each case (radical sites at the ortho, meta, and para positions). Using a room temperature ion trap, second-order rate coefficients, product branching ratios, and reaction efficiencies are measured. The rate coefficients increase from para to ortho positions. The second-order rate coefficients can be sorted into three groups: low, between 1 and 3 × 10-12 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 (3Anl and 4Anl); intermediate, between 5 and 15 × 10-12 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 (2Bzn, 3Bzn, and 4Bzn); and high, between 8 and 31 × 10-11 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 (2Anl, 2Pyr, 3Pyr, and 4Pyr); and 2Anl is the only radical cation with a rate coefficient distinctly different from its isomers. Quantum chemical calculations, using M06-2X-D3(0)/6-31++G(2df,p) geometries and DSD-PBEP86-NL/aug-cc-pVQZ energies, are deployed to rationalize reactivity trends based on the stability of prereactive complexes. The G3X-K method guides the assignment of product ions following adduct formation. The rate coefficient trend can be rationalized by a simple model based on the prereactive complex forward barrier height.

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