Literature DB >> 11321321

Phenyl-modified reversed-phase liquid chromatography coupled to atmospheric pressure chemical ionization mass spectrometry: a universal method for the analysis of partially oxidized aromatic hydrocarbons.

T Letzel1, U Pöschl, R Wissiack, E Rosenberg, M Grasserbauer, R Niessner.   

Abstract

A new liquid chromatographic method for the efficient separation of aromatic compounds having a wide range of sizes, molecular structures, and polarities has been developed. Based on a phenyl-modified silica reversed stationary phase and a methanol-water solvent gradient, it allows the separation of mono- and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) having up to five condensed aromatic rings and partially oxidized derivatives within a single chromatographic run of 40-min duration. The applicability of the method is demonstrated using 81 reference substances (PAHs, phenols, quinones, acids, lactones, esters, etc.) and real samples of environmental, medical, and technical relevance (ozonized PAHs, lake water, human urine, diesel exhaust condensates). The retention times of the investigated aromatics exhibit a regular increase with molecular mass and a systematic decrease with increasing number and polarity of functional groups. In case of intramolecular hydrogen bonding, a positive shift of retention time provides additional structural information. The combination of chromatographic retention time with the molecular mass and structural information from mass spectrometric detection allows the tentative identification of unknown aromatic analytes at trace levels, even without specific reference substances. With atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI), low detection limits and highly informative fragmentation patterns can be obtained by in-source collision-induced fragmentation in a single-quadrupole LC-APCI-MS system as applied in this study, and multidimensional MS experiments are expected to further enhance the potential of the presented method.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11321321     DOI: 10.1021/ac001079t

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anal Chem        ISSN: 0003-2700            Impact factor:   6.986


  5 in total

1.  HPLC/APCI-FTICR-MS as a tool for identification of partial polar mutagenic compounds in effect-directed analysis.

Authors:  Mahmoud Bataineh; Urte Lübcke-von Varel; Heiko Hayen; Werner Brack
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2010-02-12       Impact factor: 3.109

2.  Efficient analysis of non-polar environmental contaminants by MALDI-TOF MS with graphene as matrix.

Authors:  Jing Zhang; Xiaoli Dong; Jinsheng Cheng; Jinghong Li; Yinsheng Wang
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2011-04-22       Impact factor: 3.109

3.  An analytical investigation of 24 oxygenated-PAHs (OPAHs) using liquid and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry.

Authors:  Steven G O'Connell; Theodore Haigh; Glenn Wilson; Kim A Anderson
Journal:  Anal Bioanal Chem       Date:  2013-09-05       Impact factor: 4.142

4.  Benzene oxygenation and oxidation by the peroxygenase of Agrocybe aegerita.

Authors:  Alexander Karich; Martin Kluge; René Ullrich; Martin Hofrichter
Journal:  AMB Express       Date:  2013-01-17       Impact factor: 3.298

5.  Analysis of large oxygenated and nitrated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons formed under simulated diesel engine exhaust conditions (by compound fingerprints with SPE/LC-API-MS).

Authors:  Christoph Adelhelm; Reinhard Niessner; Ulrich Pöschl; Thomas Letzel
Journal:  Anal Bioanal Chem       Date:  2008-06-16       Impact factor: 4.142

  5 in total

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