How Soft Is Secondary Electrospray Ionization?

Jérôme Kaeslin, Cedric Wüthrich, Stamatios Giannoukos, and Renato Zenobi

Abstract

Secondary electrospray ionization (SESI) mass spectrometry (MS) is a direct infusion technique often used for untargeted metabolomics, e.g., for online breath analysis. SESI is thought to be a soft ionization method, which is important to avoid interference from in-source fragments and to simplify compound annotation. In this work, benzylammonium ions, formed from volatile benzylamines, with known bond dissociation enthalpies were used as thermometer ions to investigate the internal energy distribution of ions that are produced by SESI. It is shown that SESI is softer than electrospray ionization (ESI), and therefore, SESI indeed qualifies as a soft ionization technique. However, we also found that the standard MS instrument settings used in the SESI community are relatively harsh. Proper soft tuning of the instrument is essential to fully benefit from the softness that SESI can provide. Moreover, there is evidence from in-source collision-induced dissociation (CID) experiments that analytes can be solvated in SESI under soft conditions, which supports a recently proposed SESI mechanism referred to as ligand switching.

View on the original journal

Previous
Previous

Validating Discriminative Signatures for Obstructive Sleep Apnea in Exhaled Breath

Next
Next

Data Set accompanying "How soft is secondary electrospray ionization?"