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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Ion mobility-mass spectrometry studies of organic and organometallic complexes and reaction monitoring

Wright, Victoria E. January 2013 (has links)
Ion mobility (IM) spectrometry is a gas-phase electrophoretic technique in which ions are separated on the basis of their relative mobility in the presence of a weak electric field gradient and a buffer gas. Ion mobility-mass spectrometry (IM-MS) has the capability of separating ions based on m/z, size and shape, providing additional structural information compared to using mass spectrometry on its own. In this thesis, IM-MS has been used to investigate organic and organometallic complexes and identify reactants, intermediates and products in reaction mixtures. Collision cross sections (CCS) have been measured for three salen ligands, and their complexes with copper and zinc using travelling-wave ion mobility-mass spectrometry (TWIMS) and drift tube ion mobility-mass spectrometry (DTIMS), allowing a comparative size evaluation of the ligands and complexes. CCS measurements using TWIMS were determined using peptide and TAAH calibration standards with good intra-day and inter-day reproducibility. TWIMS measurements gave significantly larger CCS than DTIMS derived data in helium, indicating that the choice of calibration standards is important in ensuring the accuracy of TWIMS derived CCS measurements. The CCS data obtained from IM-MS measurements have been compared to CCS values obtained from X-ray coordinates and modelled structures. The analysis of small organic and organometallic molecules has been extended to investigations of the potential of IM-MS for reaction monitoring and structural studies of the components of catalytic cycles. Reaction mixtures of an organocatalysed Diels-Alder cycloaddition reaction have been monitored using IM-MS and high-field asymmetric waveform ion mobility-mass spectrometry (FAIMS-MS). Reactant, product, catalyst and reaction intermediates, including an intermediate not previously detected, were identified and the catalyst and intermediates monitored over time. An organometallic catalytic cycle using a palladium catalyst has been analysed using IM-MS and the CCS of reactants, intermediates and products have been measured and compared to theoretical CCS calculations. Good agreement was observed between measured and calculated data. Species not amenable to electrospray ionisation were covalently bound to an ionisable tag containing a quaternary ammonium ion allowing the tagged molecules to be detected by IM-MS.
2

Investigation on Gas-phase Structures of Biomolecules Using Ion Mobility-mass Spectrometry

Tao, Lei 2010 May 1900 (has links)
IM-MS is a 2-D technique which provides separations based on ion shape (ion-neutral collision cross-section, Ω) and mass (m/z ratio). Ion structures can be deduced from the measured collision cross-section (Ωmeas) by calculating the collision cross-sections (Ωcalc) of candidates generated by molecular dynamics (MD) and compared with the experiment results. A database of Ωs for singly-charged peptide ions is presented. Standard proteins are digested using different enzymes (trypsin, chymotrypsin and pepsin), resulting in peptides that differ in amino acid composition. The majority (63%) of the peptide ion correlates well with the globular structures, but some exhibit Ωs that are significantly larger or smaller than the average correlation. Of the peptide ions having larger Ωs, approximately 71% are derived from trypsin digestion and most of the peptide ions that have smaller Ωs are derived from pepsin digestion (90%). We use computational simulations and clustering methods to assign backbone conformations for singly-protonated ions of the model peptide (NH2-Met-Ile-Phe-Ala-Gly-Ile-Lys-COOH) formed by both MALDI and ESI and compare the structures of MIFAGIK derivatives to test the ‘sensitivity’ of the cluster analysis method. Cluster analysis suggests that [MIFAGIK + H]+ ions formed by MALDI have a predominantly turn structure even though the low energy ions prefer partial helical conformers. Although the ions formed by ESI have Ωs that are different from those formed by MALDI, the results of cluster analysis indicate that the ions backbone structures are similar. Chemical modifications (N-acetyl, methylester, as well as addition of Boc or Fmoc groups) of MIFAGIK alter the distribution of various conformers, the most dramatic changes are observed for the [M + Na]+ ion, which show a strong preference for random coil conformers owing to the strong solvation by the backbone amide groups. Ωmeas of oligodeoxynucleotides in different length have been measured in both positive and negative modes. For a given molecular weight and charge state, Ωmeas of the oligodeoxynucleotide ions are smaller than those of the peptides, indicating their different packing efficiency. A novel generalized non-Boltzman sampling MD has been utilized to investigate the gas-phase ion conformations of dGGATC based on the free energy values. Theory predicts only one low-energy conformer for the zwitterionic form of dGGATC- while dGGATC+ ions have several stable conformers in both canonical and zwitterionic form in the gas phase, in good agreement with the experiment.

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