Literature DB >> 28580221

Improving the Resolution of Kendrick Mass Defect Analysis for Polymer Ions with Fractional Base Units.

Thierry Fouquet1, Hiroaki Sato1.   

Abstract

The concept of a fractional base unit for the Kendrick mass defect (KMD) analysis of polymer ions is introduced for the first time. A fraction of the ethylene oxide (EO) repeat unit (namely EO/8) has been used for the KMD analysis of a poly(ethylene oxide) and found to amplify the variations of KMD between monoisotopic and 13C isotopes, producing an isotopically resolved KMD plot at full scale when the KMD plot computed with EO is fuzzy. The expansion of the KMD dimension using a fractional base unit has then been successfully used to unequivocally discriminate all the distributions from a blend of poly(ethylene oxide)s in a high resolution KMD plot calculated with EO/3 as base unit. Extending the concept of fractional base units to other repeat units, the visualization of the co-oligomers from a poly(ethylene oxide-b-propylene oxide-b-ethylene oxide) triblock copolymer has been dramatically improved using a fraction of the propylene oxide repeat unit (namely PO/3) in an oligomer and isotope resolved plot. High resolution KMD plots were eventually calculated from tandem mass spectra of poly(dimethylsiloxane) ions using a fraction of the dimethylsiloxane (DMS) unit (namely DMS/6) with clearer point alignments and a discrimination of all the product ion series, out of reach of the KMD analysis using DMS. Versatile and producing high resolution KMD plots, the introduction of fractional base units is believed to be a major step towards the implementation of the KMD analysis as a routine data mining tool for mass spectrometry in polymer chemistry.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Kendrick mass defect; ethylene oxide–propylene oxide copolymer; matrix assisted laser desorption ionization MS; poly(ethylene oxide); polydimethylsiloxane

Year:  2017        PMID: 28580221      PMCID: PMC5447562          DOI: 10.5702/massspectrometry.A0055

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mass Spectrom (Tokyo)        ISSN: 2186-5116


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