Physical/chemical separations in the break-up of highly charged droplets from electrosprays
- 1 March 2001
- journal article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry
- Vol. 12 (3) , 343-347
- https://doi.org/10.1016/s1044-0305(01)00222-7
Abstract
Highly-charged droplets, as formed by an electrospray process, are known to undergo asymmetric fission to form smaller droplets. We have observed a chemical and physical separation phenomenon that occurs in the droplet break-up process and is related to a compound’s surface activity in solution. Two experimental approaches demonstrated that the smaller satellite droplets and the progeny droplets generated by the spray formation and asymmetric fission processes to be surfactant-enriched. These smaller droplets were also effectively separated from the larger primary and residual droplets because of their smaller inertia and high surface charge density, and a region attributed to the initially formed smaller satellite droplets was found to be strikingly confined in a narrow periphery region of the electrospray. The phenomenon may have utility for chemical separations and have significant implications for the sensitivity and selectivity of electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Theoretical prediction of charged droplet evaporation and fission in electrospray ionizationInternational Journal of Mass Spectrometry, 1999
- A Predictive Model for Matrix and Analyte Effects in Electrospray Ionization of Singly-Charged Ionic AnalytesAnalytical Chemistry, 1997
- On the structure of an electrostatic spray of monodisperse dropletsPhysics of Fluids, 1994
- Charge and fission of droplets in electrostatic spraysPhysics of Fluids, 1994
- Dependence of ion intensity in electrospray mass spectrometry on the concentration of the analytes in the electrosprayed solutionAnalytical Chemistry, 1993
- Ion formation from charged droplets: Roles of geometry, energy, and timeJournal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry, 1993
- Generation of submicron monodisperse aerosols in electrospraysJournal of Aerosol Science, 1990
- Electrified droplet fission and the Rayleigh limitLangmuir, 1989
- Interference effects from aerosol ionic redistribution in analytical atomic spectrometryAnalytical Chemistry, 1980
- Non-linear capillary instability of a liquid jetJournal of Fluid Mechanics, 1968