AI Article Synopsis

  • Ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) analyzes ions by their movement in gas under an electric field, but complex behaviors arise at higher fields due to various interactions between ions and gas.
  • Recent advancements have applied a two-temperature theory to better understand mobilities of polyatomic ions, facing challenges like inelastic collisions and ion structural changes, particularly in diatomic gases.
  • A new calculation method presented in this study accounts for ion heating effects, significantly improving the correlation between theoretical predictions and experimental results for specific tetraalkylammonium salts.

Article Abstract

Ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) separates and analyzes ions based on their mobility in a gas under an electric field. When the field is increased, the mobility varies in a complex way that depends on the relative velocity between gas and ion, their electrostatic potential interactions, and the effects from direct impingement. Recently, the two-temperature theory, primarily developed for monoatomic ions in monoatomic gases, has been extended to study mobilities at arbitrary fields using polyatomic ions in polyatomic gases, with some success. However, this extension poses challenges, such as inelastic collisions between gas and ion and structural modifications of ions as they heat up. These challenges become significant when working with diatomic gases and flexible molecules. In a previous study, experimental mobilities of tetraalkylammonium salts were obtained using a FAIMS instrument, showing satisfactory agreement with numerical two-temperature theory predictions. However, deviations occurred at fields greater than 100 Td. To address this issue, this paper introduces a modified high-field calculation method that accounts for the structural changes in ions due to field heating. The study focuses on tetraheptylammonium (THA), tetradecylammonium (TDA), and tetradodecylammonium (TDDA) salts. Molecular structures were generated at various temperatures using MM2 forcefield. The mobility was calculated using IMoS 1.13 with two-temperature trajectory method calculations up to the fourth approximation. Multiple effective temperatures were considered, and a linear weighing system was used to create mobility reduced field strength plots. The results suggest that the structural enlargement due to ion heating plays a significant role in mobility at high fields, aligning better with experimental data. FAIMS' dispersion plots also show improved agreement with experimental results. However, the contribution of inelastic collisions and energy transfer to rotational degrees of freedom in gas molecules remains a complex and challenging aspect.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3cp05415bDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

two-temperature theory
12
ion mobility
8
arbitrary fields
8
gas ion
8
inelastic collisions
8
mobility
6
ion
5
ions
5
mobility calculations
4
calculations flexible
4

Similar Publications

Extensive research on ultrashort laser-induced melting of noble metals like Au, Ag and Cu is available. However, studies on laser energy deposition and thermal damage of their alloys, which are currently attracting interest for energy harvesting and storage devices, are limited. This study investigates the melting damage threshold (DT) of three intermetallic alloys of Au and Cu (AuCu, AuCu and AuCu) subjected to single-pulse femtosecond laser irradiation, comparing them with their constituent metals.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Entropy Analysis of Implicit Heat Fluxes in Multi-Temperature Mixtures.

Entropy (Basel)

August 2024

U.S. Department of Energy, National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL), 626 Cochrans Mill Road, Pittsburg, PA 15236, USA.

We propose new implicit constitutive relations for the heat fluxes of a two-temperature mixture of fluids. These relations are frame-indifferent forms. However, classical explicit forms of the stress tensors and the interaction forces (specified as explicit forms of constitutive relations) as given in mixture theory are used.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We report a simulation methodology to quantitatively predict the thermodynamic behaviour (phase diagrams) of polymer mixtures, that exhibit phases with broken orientational symmetry. Our system consists of a binary mixture of short oligomers ( = 4) and long rod-like mesogens ( = 8). Using coarse-grained molecular dynamics (CGMD) simulations we infer the topology of the temperature-dependent free energy landscape, from the probability distributions of the components for a range of compositions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Anthropogenic climate change and the associated increase in sea temperatures are projected to greatly impact marine ecosystems. Temperature variation can influence the interactions between species, leading to cascading effects on the abundance, diversity and composition of communities. Such changes in community structure can have consequences on ecosystem stability, processes and the services it provides.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In this study, we aim to explore the effect of chirality on the phase behavior of active helical particles driven by two-temperature scalar activity. We first calculate the equation of state of soft helical particles of various intrinsic chiralities using molecular dynamics (MD) simulation. In equilibrium, the emergence of various liquid crystal (LC) phases such as nematic (), cholesteric , smectic (Sm) and crystal () crucially depends on the presence of walls that induce planar alignment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!