August 1, 2007
Journal Article

Effect of the Surface Morphology on the Energy Transfer in Ion-Surface Collisions

Abstract

Time- and energy-resolved surface-induced dissociation (SID) of singly protonated des-Arg1-bradykinin (PPGFSPFR) combined with RRKM modeling was used to explore the effect of surface morphology on the energy transfer in collisions of large ions with surfaces. Experiments were performed in a Fourier Transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometer (FT-ICR MS) specially configured for SID studies. Massselected and vibrationally relaxed ions were collided with three diamond surfaces of varying degree of roughness. The results demonstrate that internal energy distributions resulting from collisions of large ions with surfaces are rather independent of the surface morphology: the translational to vibrational (T?V) energy transfer efficiency is 19.5±0.5% for all three diamond surfaces. However, the scattered ion signal increases with decrease in the degree of roughness of the SID target suggesting that smooth diamond surfaces are better targets for analytical applications.

Revised: March 17, 2011 | Published: August 1, 2007

Citation

Yang Z., O. Hadjar, and J. Laskin. 2007. Effect of the Surface Morphology on the Energy Transfer in Ion-Surface Collisions. International Journal of Mass Spectrometry 265, no. 1:124-129. PNNL-SA-52720. doi:10.1016/j.ijms.2007.01.018