Analysis of Molecular Isotopic Structures at High Precision and Accuracy by Orbitrap Mass Spectrometry
Abstract
Several technologies are being developed to examine the intramolecular isotopic structures of molecules (i.e., site-specific and multiple substitution), but limitations in sample size and type or (for mass spectrometry) resolution have so far prevented the creation of a general technique. We have now demonstrated the capacity for precise and accurate study of molecular isotopic contents and structures by Fourier transform mass spectrometry, using instruments containing a Thermo Scientific™ Orbitrap™ mass analyzer, here the Thermo Scientific Q Exactive GC™ and Q Exactive HF™ instruments. Orbitrap mass analyzers achieve mass resolutions in the range ∼250,000–1 M (FWHM) in the mass range of greatest interest to studies of molecular isotopic structure, 50–200 amu. This allows for resolution of many nearly isobaric interferences for compounds containing H, C, N, O and/or S. In this paper we show that internal and external experimental reproducibilities of isotope ratio analyses using the Orbitrap analysis can conform to shot-noise limits down to levels of tenths of per mil (1SE), with similar accuracy when standardized to reference materials. Precision reaches ±0.015‰ for exceptionally long integrations. Such measurements do not call for modifications to the ion optics of the Q Exactive instruments, but do require specially designed sample introduction devices to permit sample/standard comparison and long integration times. The sensitivity of the Q Exactive instruments permit analysis of sub-nanomolar samples and quantification of multiply-substituted species. Site-specific capabilities arise from the fact that mass spectra of molecular analytes commonly contain diverse fragment ion species, each of which samples a specific sub-set of molecular sites.
Additional Information
© 2017 Elsevier B.V. Received 20 July 2017, Revised 3 October 2017, Accepted 3 October 2017, Available online 9 October 2017.Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 82450
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- CaltechAUTHORS:20171018-091904641
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2017-10-18Created from EPrint's datestamp field
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2021-11-15Created from EPrint's last_modified field
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- Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences (GPS)