August 1, 2007
Journal Article

Charge Retention by Peptide Ions Soft-Landed onto Self-Assembled Monolayer Surfaces

Abstract

Soft-landing of singly and doubly protonated peptide ions onto three self-assembled monolayer surfaces (SAMs) was performed using a novel ion deposition instrument constructed in our laboratory and a Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometer (FT-ICR MS) specially designed for studying collisions of large ions with surfaces.. Modified surfaces were analyzed using in situ 2 keV Cs+ secondary ion mass spectrometry or ex situ 15 keV Ga+ time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS). The results demonstrate that a fraction of multiply protonated peptide ions retain more than one proton following soft-landing on the FSAM surface. [M+2H]2+ ions observed in FT-ICR SIMS spectra are produced by desorption of multiply charged ions from the surface, while re-ionization of singly protonated ions or neutral peptides is a source of [M+2H]2+ ions in Tof-SIMS spectra. Differences in neutralization efficiency of soft-landed ions following exposure of surfaces to laboratory air has a measurable effect on the results of ex situ ToF-SIMS analysis of soft-landed ions on SAM surfaces.

Revised: July 31, 2007 | Published: August 1, 2007

Citation

Laskin J., P. Wang, O. Hadjar, J.H. Futrell, J. Alvarez, and R.G. Cooks. 2007. "Charge Retention by Peptide Ions Soft-Landed onto Self-Assembled Monolayer Surfaces." International Journal of Mass Spectrometry 265, no. 1:237-243. PNNL-SA-52953.