Literature DB >> 19830787

Analysis of antioxidants in insulation cladding of copper wire: a comparison of different mass spectrometric techniques (ESI-IT, MALDI-RTOF and RTOF-SIMS).

Johannes Schnöller1, Ernst Pittenauer, Herbert Hutter, Günter Allmaier.   

Abstract

Commercial copper wire and its polymer insulation cladding was investigated for the presence of three synthetic antioxidants (ADK STAB AO412S, Irganox 1010 and Irganox MD 1024) by three different mass spectrometric techniques including electrospray ionization-ion trap-mass spectrometry (ESI-IT-MS), matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization reflectron time-of-flight (TOF) mass spectrometry (MALDI-RTOF-MS) and reflectron TOF secondary ion mass spectrometry (RTOF-SIMS). The samples were analyzed either directly without any treatment (RTOF-SIMS) or after a simple liquid/liquid extraction step (ESI-IT-MS, MALDI-RTOF-MS and RTOF-SIMS). Direct analysis of the copper wire itself or of the insulation cladding by RTOF-SIMS allowed the detection of at least two of the three antioxidants but at rather low sensitivity as molecular radical cations and with fairly strong fragmentation (due to the highly energetic ion beam of the primary ion gun). ESI-IT- and MALDI-RTOF-MS-generated abundant protonated and/or cationized molecules (ammoniated or sodiated) from the liquid/liquid extract. Only ESI-IT-MS allowed simultaneous detection of all three analytes in the extract of insulation claddings. The latter two so-called 'soft' desorption/ionization techniques exhibited intense fragmentation only by applying low-energy collision-induced dissociation (CID) tandem MS on a multistage ion trap-instrument and high-energy CID on a tandem TOF-instrument (TOF/RTOF), respectively. Strong differences in the fragmentation behavior of the three analytes could be observed between the different CID spectra obtained from either the IT-instrument (collision energy in the very low eV range) or the TOF/RTOF-instrument (collision energy 20 keV), but both delivered important structural information. Copyright 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Entities:  

Year:  2009        PMID: 19830787     DOI: 10.1002/jms.1681

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mass Spectrom        ISSN: 1076-5174            Impact factor:   1.982


  2 in total

1.  Quantitative analysis of polymer additives with MALDI-TOF MS using an internal standard approach.

Authors:  Clemens Schwarzinger; Stefan Gabriel; Susanne Beißmann; Wolfgang Buchberger
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2012-03-27       Impact factor: 3.109

2.  The quantitative surface analysis of an antioxidant additive in a lubricant oil matrix by desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry.

Authors:  Caitlyn Da Costa; James C Reynolds; Samuel Whitmarsh; Tom Lynch; Colin S Creaser
Journal:  Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom       Date:  2013-11-15       Impact factor: 2.419

  2 in total

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