Collision cross section (CCS) measurements
resulting from ion mobility-mass spectrometry (IM-MS)
experiments provide a promising orthogonal dimension of
structural information in MS-based analytical separations. As
with any molecular identifier, interlaboratory standardization
must precede broad range integration into analytical workflows.
In this study, we present a reference drift tube ion mobility mass
spectrometer (DTIM-MS) where improvements on the
measurement accuracy of experimental parameters influencing
IM separations provide standardized drift tube, nitrogen CCS values (DTCCSN2) for over 120 unique ion species with the lowest
measurement uncertainty to date. The reproducibility of these DTCCSN2 values are evaluated across three additional laboratories
on a commercially available DTIM-MS instrument. The traditional stepped field CCS method performs with a relative standard
deviation (RSD) of 0.29% for all ion species across the three additional laboratories. The calibrated single field CCS method,
which is compatible with a wide range of chromatographic inlet systems, performs with an average, absolute bias of 0.54% to the
standardized stepped field DTCCSN2 values on the reference system. The low RSD and biases observed in this interlaboratory
study illustrate the potential of DTIM-MS for providing a molecular identifier for a broad range of discovery based analyses.
Revised: March 28, 2019 |
Published: September 5, 2017
Citation
Stow S., T.J. Causon, X. Zheng, R.T. Kurulugama Lekamlage, T. Mairinger, J.C. May, and E.E. Rennie, et al. 2017.An Interlaboratory Evaluation of Drift Tube Ion Mobility–Mass Spectrometry Collision Cross Section Measurements.Analytical Chemistry 89, no. 17:9048–9055.PNNL-SA-129678.doi:10.1021/acs.analchem.7b01729