AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study measures rate coefficients for reactions involving hydrated protons and various sample vapors to produce protonated monomers and dimers using ion mobility spectrometry with a tandem drift tube.
  • - The method involves analyzing ions through two drift regions, adjusting for drift times, and fitting curves to derive accurate rate coefficients for specific compounds like triethyl phosphate and phenylacetate.
  • - The proposed technique shows a relative error of 10% and is applicable to a range of substances, indicating it can reliably determine rate coefficients for reactions that form these types of protonated species.

Article Abstract

Rate coefficients () for the reactions of hydrated protons and a sample vapor (M) to form protonated monomers (MH(HO)) and proton bound dimers (MH) were determined simultaneously by using ion mobility spectrometry with a tandem drift tube at ambient pressure. In this method, sample vapors were introduced to a first drift region with stepwise reactions: M + H(HO) (HO) + ( - ) HO and M + MH (HO) MH + HO. Ions with a drift time between 9 and 18 ms in the first drift region were subsequently mobility analyzed in purified air with the second drift region using a synchronized second ion gate with boxcar averaging. Slope for plots of ion abundance against drift time was fitted by successive approximation between peaks of H(HO) and MH(HO) to obtain until computed and experimental slopes matched within a maximal deviation of 0.01. Values for were obtained from the experimental baseline slope when adjusted for . Rate coefficients for triethyl phosphate and phenylacetate were determined using this method with values of 1.14 × 10 ± 1.87 × 10 cm/s and 0.81 × 10 ± 9.26 × 10 cm/s and values of 1.05 × 10 ± 4.13 × 10 cm/s and 1.07 × 10 ± 1.86 × 10 cm/s, respectively. Relative error for this method was determined using mobility spectra generated with a COMSOL model and artificial rate coefficients. Rate coefficients were then extracted from the modeled mobility spectra and compared to the original artificial values. Relative error of this method was 10% and should be generally applicable for individual substances with reactions forming protonated monomers and proton bound dimers.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11657528PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.4c04434DOI Listing

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