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Analysis Using Dual Ion Source DUIS-2010 (Part 2)

Applications |  | ShimadzuInstrumentation
LC/MS, LC/SQ
Industries
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Shimadzu

Summary

Significance of the Topic


The development of versatile ionization sources in liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry (LC-MS) addresses the growing need to analyze compounds across a broad polarity spectrum in environmental, agricultural, and industrial laboratories. The Dual Ion Source (DUIS-2010) integrates both Electrospray Ionization (ESI) and Atmospheric Pressure Chemical Ionization (APCI) in a single interface, aiming to streamline workflows by eliminating the need to switch hardware when changing analyte classes.

Objectives and Study Overview


This study evaluates the performance of the DUIS-2010 interface against standalone ESI and APCI for two model compound sets:
  • High-polarity carbamate pesticides (eight analytes, 20 ng each).
  • Low-polarity alkylphenones (seven analytes, 500 ng each).
Mass chromatograms and mass spectral comparisons assess sensitivity, signal intensity, and spectral patterns for each ionization mode.

Methodology and Instrumentation


Liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry conditions were established separately for high- and low-polarity analyses. Key instrumentation parameters included:
  • LC-MS system equipped with DUIS-2010, ESI, and APCI ion sources.
  • Columns:
     • High polarity: Shim-pack XR-ODS, 30 mm×2.0 mm, 2.2 µm.
     • Low polarity: Shim-pack VP-ODS, 150 mm×2.0 mm, 5 µm.
  • Mobile phase: water (A) and methanol (B) with gradient programs tailored to each compound set.
  • Flow rates: 0.5 mL/min for pesticides; 0.2 mL/min for phenones.
  • Injection volume: 1 µL.
  • Source settings:
     • Probe voltage: +4.5 kV.
     • Nebulizing gas flow: 1.5 L/min (ESI/DUIS), 2.5 L/min (APCI) for carbamates; 0.5 L/min (DUIS), 1.5 L/min (ESI), 2.5 L/min (APCI) for phenones.
     • Drying gas pressure: 0.15 MPa (ESI/DUIS), 0.15 MPa (DUIS), 0.05 MPa (APCI) for phenones.
  • Temperatures: probe 400 °C (APCI), block heater 480 °C (DUIS) or 200 °C (ESI/APCI), CDL 300 °C (DUIS) or 250 °C (ESI/APCI).
  • Scan range: m/z 100–400 for pesticides, m/z 110–250 for phenones.

Key Results and Discussion


High-polarity compounds:
  • ESI and DUIS delivered comparable high sensitivity for carbamate pesticides; all eight analytes were clearly detected.
  • APCI showed poor sensitivity and failed to detect some analytes (e.g., aldicarb, thiram).
  • Mass spectra from DUIS and ESI exhibited nearly identical fragmentation patterns, confirming DUIS capability for polar analytes.
Low-polarity compounds:
  • APCI provided the highest signal intensities for alkylphenones.
  • DUIS signals reached approximately 70 %–80 % of the APCI intensities, outperforming ESI for nonpolar analytes.
  • Spectral profiles from DUIS paralleled those of APCI, indicating consistent ionization behavior.

Benefits and Practical Applications


The DUIS-2010 interface offers laboratories the flexibility to analyze a diverse range of analytes without manual source changes, reducing downtime and the risk of contamination. Its performance for both polar and nonpolar species supports applications in pesticide residue analysis, environmental monitoring, and quality control in pharmaceutical and food industries.

Future Trends and Applications


Integrating dual‐mode ion sources paves the way for fully automated, high‐throughput LC-MS workflows. Future developments may include:
  • Software‐controlled switching between ionization modes within a single run.
  • Coupling with high-resolution mass spectrometry for enhanced selectivity and quantitation.
  • Adaptation to emerging ionization techniques (e.g., atmospheric pressure photoionization).

Conclusion


The DUIS-2010 dual ion source demonstrates robust and reproducible performance for both high-polarity pesticides and low-polarity alkylphenones, closely matching dedicated ESI and APCI modes. Its versatility and operational efficiency offer significant advantages for routine LC-MS analyses across multiple fields.

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