Capillary introduction mass spectrometry coupled with selective cryotrapping for analysis of volatile compounds in water

Literature Information

Publication Date 2019-09-02
DOI 10.1039/C9AY01669D
Impact Factor 2.896
Authors

Siyu Xu, Quan Yu


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Abstract

Capillary introduction mass spectrometry (CI-MS) has been recently developed for the direct analysis of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in liquid samples. It exhibits the merits of simple structure, easy operation, and minimal sample consumption. For CI-MS analysis of aqueous solutions, the injection rate is generally a few microliters per minute. As the dominant component of the solution, water is drawn into the instrument together with the dissolved solutes, and it may reduce the ionization efficiency of the analytes and cause spectral interference. This proof of concept study aims to improve sampling efficiency by coupling CI with cryotrapping to implement selective removal of water. With the use of a cryotrap cooled by drikold, water vapor is effectively condensed to cause more than 90% reduction of its ion signal, whereas the detection of other components is less affected. Therein, the ion signals of the dissolved air are only slightly reduced, and the ethanol and toluene signals decrease by less than 50%. The chamber pressure drops substantially during the cryotrapping CI process, enabling a high injection rate of liquid samples to improve the detection efficiency of the uncondensed analytes. In addition, to prevent the solution from freezing at the capillary outlet in vacuum, an appropriate high voltage is applied onto the sample to initiate an electrospray (ES) at the capillary tip and increase the injection rate. On the basis of this cryotrapping ES-CI strategy, the MS detection sensitivity for ethanol in water can be improved by 29.5 times compared with conventional CI-MS, and the detection limit of the established instrument can be greatly reduced. In conclusion, selective cryotrapping is a simple and practical method to promote CI-MS analysis of VOCs in water.

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DOI: 10.1039/C0CP90129F

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Analytical Methods

Analytical Methods
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Analytical Methods welcomes early applications of new analytical and bioanalytical methods and technology demonstrating the potential for societal impact. We require that methods and technology reported in the journal are sufficiently innovative, robust, accurate, and compared to other available methods for the intended application. Developments with interdisciplinary approaches are particularly welcome. Systems should be proven with suitably complex and analytically challenging samples. We encourage developments within, but not limited to, the following technologies and applications: global health, point-of-care and molecular diagnostics biosensors and bioengineering drug development and pharmaceutical analysis applied microfluidics and nanotechnology omics studies, such as proteomics, metabolomics or glycomics environmental, agricultural and food science neuroscience biochemical and clinical analysis forensic analysis industrial process and method development

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