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Mass Spectrometry A key Tool for the chemist’s toolbox.

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Presentation on theme: "Mass Spectrometry A key Tool for the chemist’s toolbox."— Presentation transcript:

1 Mass Spectrometry A key Tool for the chemist’s toolbox.
The logic is, we always want the molecular weight. Second, we can smash out fragments that are intact structurally These are easier to solve and relate back to the starting structure Implication is, we don’t get the sample back; a destructive method

2 Mass Spectrometry A primary tool for chemists from almost every discipline Molecular Weights are fundamental to almost every structural question. Molecular weight is not ambiguous. A compound has a unique MW. Our ability to analyze compounds on this basis, depends completely on being able to generate ions from the compound. Specifically molecular ions*, whose weight is equal to the MW of the compound, are critical. Once produced, our analysis according to MW depends on differential mobility or acceleration of ions proportionate to the MW. *We can usefully broaden this definition from [M]+ to embrace [M+H]+, [M-H]-, Chemical Ionization adducts, etc.

3 What’s in a Mass Spectrum?
Derived from molecular ion or higher weight fragments Fragment Ions [M+H]+(CI) Or M•+ (EI) “molecular ion” Ion Abundance (as a %of Base peak) Unit mass spacing In CI, adduct ions, [M+reagent gas]+ Not usually scanned below m/z=32 (Why?) High mass Mass, as m/z. Z is the charge, and for doubly charged ions (often seen in macromolecules), masses show up at half their proper value

4 Molecular Ions give us the molecular mass
Dislodges an electron Electron Impact M -e• 2e-• M+• Chemical Ionization M H+ [M+H]+ Weighs one more than MW

5 Identifying Molecular Ions
Potential question; Is the largest m/z the molecular ion or is it a prominent fragment from an even heavier molecule? Increase sample loading In EI, can lower the beam voltage (make the M•+ less energetic, perhaps more long-lived.) Logical interval between significant peaks and suspected M•+ . i.e. the loss of 3-14 mass units is unusual, as is loss of (except F). Loss of 33, 35, 38 also unusual. However a loss of 15, 18, 31 is good evidence for a molecular ion. Switch to CI, vary reagent gas. Positive, negative probes. Check for CI adduct ions. e.g. C2H5+ , CH5+, C3H5+ Find MW by other method Prepare derivative Other compounds present may give ions that deceive us. May be more detectable. MS intensities are problematic

6 The “Nitrogen Rule” Molecules containing atoms limited to C,H,O,N,S,X,P of even-numbered molecular weight contain either NO nitrogen or an even number of N This is true as well for radicals as well. Not true for pre-charged, e.g. quats, (rule inverts) or radical cations. In the case of Chemical Ionization, where [M+H]+ is observed, need to subtract 1, then apply nitrogen rule. Example, if we know a compound is free of nitrogen and gives an ion at m/z=201, then that peak cannot be the molecular ion.

7 ElectronImpact and ChemicalIonization
EI Sometimes too energetic for molecular ion to survive Rich harvest of fragment ions “fingerprint” nature of fragment patterns lends itself to database library searches CI Stronger, more reliable molecular ions Fewer fragments Can choose different reagent gasses and exploit chemistry, giving different fragmentation. e.g. NH3/ND3 Adduct ions give support to identities Nitrogen rule works but inverted Can do negative ion Mass Spec EI CI

8 When would you use CI, EI? EI CI
When “fingerprint” is needed for Identification by comparison screening in databases Trace analysis Forensics Environmental Total unknowns, e.g natural products Fragment homology within a series, e.g. of natural products CI When rapid, reliable identification of molecular ion is needed. LC-MS Following a synthetic chemistry route, tentative impurity ID Biological samples, other fragile or sensitive to decomposition; Drug or other metabolite ID When reagent gas chemistry is key, e.g. exchange D in for H Minimize fragmentation, get most intensity in molecular ion.

9 How can I tell which (EI or CI) was run?
Chemical Ionization Adduct ions higher m/z than MH+, ,[M+C2H5]+ ,[M+C3H5]+ [M+NH4]+ Large molecular ion Relatively few fragment ions Electron Impact No ions higher m/z than M•+ Smaller M•+ intensity Rich family of fragment ions

10 The “Rule of 13” as an aid to guessing a molecular Formula
Take the Weight of ion, divide by 13 This answer is N, for (CH)N and any numerical remainder is added as H e.g.; 92 92/13 = 7 with remainder = 1; C7H8 weighs 92. This is our candidate formula Can evaluate other alternative candidate formulas possessing heteroatoms. For each member of the list below, replace the indicated number of CHs in the above answer Hetero substitution CH replacement O CH4 P C2H7 N CH2 S C2H8 O+N C2H6 O+S C4 F CH7 I C10H7 Si C2H4 Cl,Br (use isotopes)

11 Analyzing Ion Clusters: a way to rule candidate structures in or out
Mass spectrometry “sees” all the isotopomers as distinct ions An ion with all 12C is one mass unit different from an ion with one 13C and the rest 12C Since the isotope distribution in nature is known* for all the elements (13C is 1.1%), the anticipated range and ratios of ions for a given formula can be predicted and calculated Follows a binomial expansion: e.g.; for N carbon atoms (%12C + %13C)N

12 Clusters of Ions Spaced by unit mass Each peak is for the same molecular formula Different peaks because there are some molecules with 13C, 2H etc. Especially significant for Cl, Br The Nominal mass is m/z of the lowest member of the cluster. This is the isotopomer that has all the C’s as 12C, all protons as 1H, all N’s as 14N, etc. m/z

13 Isotope Patterns in Ion Clusters
Here are two molecular ions of nearly the same m/z. One of them is “carbon-rich”, and has a larger number of 13C’s The other, presumably has proportionately, more heteroatoms C24H50 C12H22O11

14 Why is this Important? A rule of thumb, made possible by knowing the isotopic abundance is that the number of C in a formula is given by: N= All 12C 1 13C C10 C100 2 13C From this, it is clear that for large or macromolecules, there will be practically no population having all 12C or even only 113C

15 Fragmentation or B+ + A· EI [M·]+ A+ + B· (neutral)
Better carbocation wins and predominates (“Stevenson’s Rule”) CI [M+H]+ PH+ + N (neutral) The “Even Electron Rule” dictates that even (non-radical) ions will not fragment to give two radicals (pos• + neutral•) (CI)

16 Reading a Mass Spec from the M+• Down (EI)
Fragment Due to loss of… Interpretation M+• -1 -H• Aldehydes, tert. Alcohols, cyclic amines M+• -2 Multiple -H• Secondary alcohols M+• -3 Primary alcohols M+• -4 to -13 (doubtful) Consider contaminants M+• -14 CH2• , N• not good losses M+• -15 CH3• Available methyl groups, methylesters M+• -16 O• Peroxides M+• -17 OH• Alcohols, phenols, RCO2H M+• -18 H2O alcohols M+• -19 -F• M+• -20 -HF M+• -21 to -25 No peaks expected M+• -26 HCCH M+• -27 •HC=CH2 or HCN HCN from pyridine, anilines M+• -28 CO or CH2=CH2 Check for McLafferty R&R

17 How Do I go about using Mass Spec Data for Unknowns?
First, get the molecular weight Identify prime, smaller mass losses like water, etc. Now stop. Don’t worry about the fragments till you have some candidate structures Based on NMR, IR get some notions of structure candidates or partial structures, functional groups Now go back to MS, predict some fragments your structure will give, calculate the molecular weights and check MS Back and forth with other data, to corroborate or refute a possible structure.

18 Nominal Mass Here for example is a list of the compounds in the Merck Index (9th ed) that weigh nominally, 200 Exact mass measurements can easily distinguish These instruments (and other) can generate exhaustive lists of possible structure formulas near the exact mass value.

19 Example, m/z’s for 157 Clearly, some are not realistic!
molar mass: 157 Formula M+1 M+2 MM e/o dbr HN2O e 1.5 HN10O e 5.5 H3N3O o 1 H3N o 5 H5N4O e 0.5 H7N5O o 0 CHO e 1.5 CHN8O e 5.5 CH3NO o 1 CH3N9O o 5 CH5N2O e 0.5 CH5N e 4.5 CH7N3O o 0 C2HN6O e 5.5 C2H3N7O o 5 C2H5O e 0.5 C2H5N8O e 4.5 C2H7NO o 0 C2H7N o 4 C3HN4O e 5.5 C3H3N5O o 5 C3H5N6O e 4.5 C3H7N7O o 4 C3H9N e 3.5 C4HN2O e 5.5 C4H3N3O o 5 C4H5N4O e 4.5 C4H7N5O o 4 C4H9N6O e 3.5 C4H11N o 3 C5HO e 5.5 C5H3NO o 5 C5H5N2O e 4.5 C5H7N3O o 4 C5H9N4O e 3.5 C5H11N5O o 3 C5H13N e 2.5 C6HN e 9.5 C6H5O e 4.5 C6H7NO o 4 C6H9N2O e 3.5 C6H11N3O o 3 C6H13N4O e 2.5 C6H15N o 2 C7HN4O e 9.5 C7H3N o 9 C7H9O e 3.5 C7H11NO o 3 C7H13N2O e 2.5 C7H15N3O o 2 C7H17N e 1.5 C8HN2O e 9.5 C8H3N3O o 9 C8H5N e 8.5 C8H13O e 2.5 C8H15NO o 2 C8H17N2O e 1.5 C8H19N o 1 C9HO e 9.5 C9H3NO o 9 C9H5N2O e 8.5 C9H7N o 8 C9H17O e 1.5 C9H19NO o 1 C9H21N e 0.5 C10H5O e 8.5 C10H7NO o 8 C10H9N e 7.5 C10H21O e 0.5 C10H23N o 0 C11H9O e 7.5 C11H11N o 7 C12H e 6.5 C13H e 13.5 Clearly, some are not realistic!

20 Calculated mass distributions
IMASS for Mac OSX Version 1.0 (v2A15) © , Urs Roethlisberger, Isotopic Element Massesand Atomic Weights:Lide, D.R., Ed., CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics,74th Ed., CRC Press, Boca Raton FL,(1993) Isotope Distribution:Rockwood, A. L., Van Orden, S. L.,Smith, R. D.,Anal. Chem. , 67, 2699, (1995) •iMass is freeware. •Contact:

21 Fragment Ions The Game is, to rationalize these in terms of the structure Identify as many as possible, in terms of the parent structure Generally, simply derived from the molecular ion Or, in a simple fashion from a significant higher mw fragment. Simply, here means, ions don’t fly apart, split out neutrals and then recombine. Fragments will make chemical sense A good approach is the “rule of 13” to write down a molecular formula for an ion of interest. Especially in EI, we only identify major fragments

22 Chemical Ionization Fragmentation
Loss of neutral molecules, small stable, from MH+ Loss of neutrals from protonated fragments Subsequent reprotonation after a loss Typically there is no ring cleavage (needs radical) or two bond scissions. Depends highly on ion chemistry specifically acid-base (proton affinities)

23 Some popular cleavages
Cleave at a branch point. Loss of radical or other neutral to provide a more stable cation C H 3 + . Obs. in Mass Spec neutral Cleave  to a heteroatom (capable of supporting positive charge) R O : Obs. in Mass Spec Resonance stabilized neutral + Note the use of “half arrow” for one-electron movements. e.g homolytic cleavage

24 Some examples Primary alcohols, m/z=31 CH2=OH+
Primary amines, m/z=30 CH2=NH2+

25 Commonly encountered Electron-Impact fragments
H O + 29 C H 2 + 43 H + 77 + 91 N C H 2 + 92

26 McLafferty Rearrangements
Radical cations localized on keto-type oxygen give  cleavage The mechanism limits this to EI fragmentation Needs a H atom on a  sp3 carbon Ketones, esters, carboxylic acids all give McLafferty products O + H R2 R1 O + H R1 R2 •• Loss of neutral alkene Note the use here, of the “half arrow” to represent “1-electron flow” The new radical cation is stabilized by resonance

27 Important example of McLafferty R&R
+• m/z = 60 Seen for primary carboxylic acids

28 Non-Sequential Losses
M+-CH3CO M+-CH3 MW=152

29 Hydrocarbons Weak [M•]+ Intense CnH2n+1
Good 43 m/z = C3H7 protonated cyclopropane 57 m/z = C4H9+ 71 m/z = C5H11 Hydrocarbon chains characterized by successive losses of m/z=14 (clusters)

30 Cleavage  to C=O groups
+ : + : . O + O neutral + Prominent for ketones : CH3C=O+ m/z=43 O : Obs. in mass spec. Acylium ions are resonance-stabilized

31 Example M+• -45, loss of ethoxy radical

32 Example M+• -43; also tropylium ion

33 Cleave  to Heteroatoms like O, N
neutral R + : : R O . . : O + + Observed in Mass Spec provided that a good stabilized carbocation can form Heterolytic cleavage

34 Rearrangements and fragmentations to give good Carbocations
H + 2 Benzylic cation (stabilized including “tropylium” ion m/z=91 Good cleavage  to aromatic rings C + C H H 2 + H C C H 2 C H +

35 Example Tropylium ion Bromine pattern

36 Carboxylic acids H present?; can give McLafferty R&R to alkene plus CH2=C(OH)(OH)•+ at m/z=60 Loss of water, especially in CI Loss of 44 is loss of CO2 m/z=45 suggests OC–OH+

37 Amines N -R• R Cyclic amines will lose adjacent H•, form iminium ion
+ -R• N R Cyclic amines will lose adjacent H•, form iminium ion In CI, NH+ can eliminate adjacent alkene, reprotonate

38 Silyl Ethers Loss of CH3• from Si Loss of R• in  cleavage
Loss of •CR3 then CH3• to (CH3)2Si=OH+ m/z=75 Total loss of carbinol to (CH3)3Si+ m/z=73

39 H transfer in heterosubstituted Anisoles
+ Loss of CH2O Extra H transfer mediated by adjacent heteroatom O R H H H +•

40 Nitroaromatics m/z= 93 Loss of •N=O
(this can form from lots of different origins) Loss of •N=O N + O• O Loss of CO Aromatic! m/z=65 Good test for aryloxy

41 Sulfur Compounds Fortunately there is an [M+2]+ of 4% for the natural abundance of 34S. This is diagnostic for S vs 2x16O Aliphatic thiols can split out H2S, [M-34] Alpha cleavage at carbon bearing the sulfur in thiols, thioethers, similar to ethers, etc. -R• R

42 The “retro Diels-Alder” Cleavage
Cyclohexenes, with favorable 6-membered transition state. Can include heteroatoms (N,O, driven by keto-enol like stability. + Observed! Typically you see both. More stable cation will predominate Also works for hetero-substituted (e.g. make enol) Both EI (shown) and in Chemical Ionization. (protonated molecular ion, cleave, then reprotonation

43 An Example from Terpenoid Chemistry
+ + + 12-Oleanene m/z 204

44 A good example for Retro Diels Alder fragmentation
EI Mass Spectrum + + + 4-terpineol MW 154 mz 86 mz 68

45 Double bonds can isomerize
-cleavage following double bond migration MW=396 m/z118 136-water m/z136 C9H12O+

46 Mass Spectral “shifts”
Note highly conserved regions; series of related compounds Losses down to ions common in series. Variation can not influence the fragmentation or introduce new fragmentation, e.g. internal fission not possible for homologs

47 Using the Information in Ion Clusters--Halogens
The paired appearance flags the ions as to the number of halogens Fragment ions with the same halogen count preserve the pattern 35Cl 79Br 81Br2 81Br1 81Br 37Cl CH3Cl One chlorine CHCl3 Three chlorines CH3Br One bromine CHBr3 Three bromines

48 Great Websites http://medlib.med.utah.edu/masspec/elcomp.htm
Calculate potential molecular formulas from m/z (neutrals only) Wizard calculates both odd, even electron species based on m/z The same folks provide a online wizard for calculating ion clusters (isotope patterns) from a suggested formula. Free search of name, formulas


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