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Direct Quantification of Chemical Warfare Agents and Related Compounds at Low ppt Levels: Comparing Active Capillary Dielectric Barrier Discharge Plasma Ionization and Secondary Electrospray Ionization Mass Spectrometry
journal contribution
posted on 2015-01-06, 00:00 authored by Jan-Christoph Wolf, Martin Schaer, Peter Siegenthaler, Renato ZenobiA novel active capillary dielectric
barrier discharge plasma ionization
(DBDI) technique for mass spectrometry is applied to the direct detection
of 13 chemical warfare related compounds, including sarin, and compared
to secondary electrospray ionization (SESI) in terms of selectivity
and sensitivity. The investigated compounds include an intact chemical
warfare agent and structurally related molecules, hydrolysis products
and/or precursors of highly toxic nerve agents (G-series, V-series,
and “new” nerve agents), and blistering and incapacitating
warfare agents. Well-defined analyte gas phase concentrations were
generated by a pressure-assisted nanospray with consecutive thermal
evaporation and dilution. Identification was achieved by selected
reaction monitoring (SRM). The most abundant fragment ion intensity
of each compound was used for quantification. For DBDI and SESI, absolute
gas phase detection limits in the low ppt range (in MS/MS mode) were
achieved for all compounds investigated. Although the sensitivity
of both methods was comparable, the active capillary DBDI sensitivity
was found to be dependent on the applied AC voltage, thus enabling
direct tuning of the sensitivity and the in-source fragmentation,
which may become a key feature in terms of field applicability. Our
findings underline the applicability of DBDI and SESI for the direct,
sensitive detection and quantification of several CWA types and their
degradation products. Furthermore, they suggest the use of DBDI in
combination with hand-held instruments for CWAs on-site monitoring.
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Keywords
nerve agents13 chemical warfarehydrolysis productscompoundtermmass spectrometrygas phase detection limitsChemical Warfare Agentsfragment ion intensityLow ppt LevelsMSDirect Quantificationchemical warfare agentreaction monitoringcapillary DBDI sensitivityRelated Compoundsdegradation productsSecondary Electrospray Ionization Mass SpectrometryA novelSRMActive Capillary Dielectric Barrier Discharge Plasma IonizationCWA typesSESIwarfare agentselectrospray ionizationquantificationcapillary dielectric barrier discharge plasma ionizationppt rangefield applicabilityAC voltage