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Improved Low Mass Transmission Efficiency in High Resolution Ion Mobility (HRIM) – Mass Spectrometry (MS) for Expanded Application Profiles

Posters | 2022 | MOBILion Systems | ASMSInstrumentation
Ion Mobility, LC/TOF, LC/HRMS, LC/MS, LC/MS/MS
Industries
Other
Manufacturer
Agilent Technologies, MOBILion Systems

Summary

Significance of the Topic


The capability to efficiently transmit low-mass ions in high-resolution ion mobility–mass spectrometry (HRIM–MS) is critical for analyzing small molecules in metabolomics, pharmaceutical research, and environmental studies. Enhancing low mass transmission extends the analytical range of SLIM-based platforms, enabling detection of low m/z analytes with improved sensitivity and resolution.

Objectives and Study Overview


This study sought to modify the MOBIE system to improve low mass transmission down to ~100 m/z. The approach involved increasing the SLIM radio-frequency (RF) frequency, switching drift gas from nitrogen to helium, and validating performance through a credentialed Escherichia coli metabolomics workflow.

Methodology


  • The SLIM RF frequency was elevated from 800 kHz to 1.07 MHz using a high-Q RF head.
  • Helium (5.0 grade) replaced nitrogen as the drift gas at 2.5 Torr.
  • Simulations verified enhanced low-mass ion confinement at higher RF frequencies.
  • Performance was assessed using standard tune solutions and an LC–HRIM–MS method with a credentialed E. coli metabolomics kit.

Instrumentation Used


  • MOBIE platform with SLIM (structures for lossless ion manipulations) modules.
  • MIPS Ultra High Q RF Head for increased frequency performance.
  • Agilent 6545B quadrupole time-of-flight (QTOF) mass spectrometer.
  • Acquiris SA220 14-bit analog-to-digital converter (ADC).
  • High-purity helium drift gas at controlled pressure.

Main Results and Discussion


The combined use of higher RF frequency and helium drift gas significantly improved the transmission of ions down to ~100 m/z. Baseline separation of isomeric amino acids leucine and isoleucine at 132 m/z was achieved with a collision cross-section difference of ~1.3%. HRIM provided baseline resolution of nine quality-control reference compounds spanning 149–608 m/z. Mobility-aligned fragmentation demonstrated identical MS/MS patterns for racemic verapamil peaks. For the first time under these conditions, syn- and anti-conformers of adenosine were fully separated in the mobility domain.

Benefits and Practical Applications


  • Expanded mass range supports detailed analysis of low-mass metabolites and small molecules.
  • Enhanced separation of isomers, conformers, and racemic pairs improves structural elucidation.
  • Increased sensitivity and resolution benefit metabolomics, pharmaceutical screening, and environmental analysis.
  • Workflow compatibility with credentialed kits ensures robust QA/QC in routine analyses.

Future Trends and Opportunities


Continued development may include integration with multidimensional separations, further RF optimization, and exploration of chiral separation mechanisms. Potential applications span clinical diagnostics, environmental monitoring, and high-throughput screening of small molecules.

Conclusion


This work demonstrates that augmenting RF frequency and employing helium drift gas on SLIM boards substantially enhances low-mass transmission in HRIM–MS, extending analytical capabilities and opening new avenues in small molecule analysis.

References


  1. Zheng et al. Chem Sci. 8(11), 2017, pp 7724–7736.
  2. Leritano C et al. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 61(9), 2022.
  3. Chytil L et al. J Chromatogr B. 878(30), 2010.
  4. Mahieu NG et al. Anal Chem. 86, 2014, pp 9583–9589.
  5. Di Poto C et al. J Am Soc Mass Spectrom. 32(8), 2021, pp 2072–2080.

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