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Featured researches published by David J. Borton.


Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2012

HPLC/APCI mass spectrometry of saturated and unsaturated hydrocarbons by using hydrocarbon solvents as the APCI reagent and HPLC mobile phase.

Jinshan Gao; Benjamin C. Owen; David J. Borton; Zhicheng Jin; Hilkka I. Kenttämaa

Saturated and unsaturated, linear, branched, and cyclic hydrocarbons, as well as polyaromatic and heteroaromatic hydrocarbons, were successfully ionized by atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) using small hydrocarbons as reagents in a linear quadrupole ion trap (LQIT) mass spectrometer. Pentane was proved to be the best reagent among the hydrocarbon reagents studied. This ionization method generated different types of abundant ions (i.e., [M + H]+, M+•, [M – H]+ and [M – 2H]+ •), with little or no fragmentation. The radical cations can be differentiated from the even-electron ions by using dimethyl disulfide, thus facilitating molecular weight (MW) determination. While some steroids and lignin monomer model compounds, such as androsterone and 4-hydroxy-3-methoxybenzaldehyde, also formed abundant M+• and [M + H]+ ions, this was not true for all of them. Analysis of two known mixtures as well as a base oil sample demonstrated that each component of the known mixtures could be observed and that a correct MW distribution was obtained for the base oil. The feasibility of using this ionization method on the chromatographic time scale was demonstrated by using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with hexane as the mobile phase (and APCI reagent) to separate an artificial mixture prior to mass spectrometric analysis.


Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2011

Carbon disulfide reagent allows the characterization of nonpolar analytes by atmospheric pressure chemical ionization mass spectrometry

Benjamin C. Owen; Jinshan Gao; David J. Borton; Lucas M. Amundson; Enada F. Archibold; Xiaoli Tan; Khalid Azyat; Rik R. Tykwinski; Murray R. Gray; Hilkka I. Kenttämaa

While atmospheric pressure ionization methodologies have revolutionized the mass spectrometric analysis of nonvolatile analytes, limitations native to the chemistry of these methodologies hinder or entirely inhibit the analysis of certain analytes, specifically, many nonpolar compounds. Examination of various analytes, including asphaltene and lignin model compounds as well as saturated hydrocarbons, demonstrates that atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) using CS(2) as the reagent produces an abundant and stable molecular ion (M(+•)) for all model compounds studied, with the exception of completely saturated aliphatic hydrocarbons and the two amino acids tested, arginine and phenylalanine. This reagent substantially broadens the applicability of mass spectrometry to nonvolatile nonpolar analytes and also facilitates the examination of radical cation chemistry by mass spectrometry.


Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2011

Laser-Induced Acoustic Desorption/Atmospheric Pressure Chemical Ionization Mass Spectrometry

Jinshan Gao; David J. Borton; Benjamin C. Owen; Zhicheng Jin; Matt Hurt; Lucas M. Amundson; Jeremy T. Madden; Kuangnan Qian; Hilkka I. Kenttämaa

Laser-induced acoustic desorption (LIAD) was successfully coupled to a conventional atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) source in a commercial linear quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer (LQIT). Model compounds representing a wide variety of different types, including basic nitrogen and oxygen compounds, aromatic and aliphatic compounds, as well as unsaturated and saturated hydrocarbons, were tested separately and as a mixture. These model compounds were successfully evaporated into the gas phase by using LIAD and then ionized by using APCI with different reagents. From the four APCI reagent systems tested, neat carbon disulfide provided the best results. The mixture of methanol and water produced primarily protonated molecules, as expected. However, only the most basic compounds yielded ions under these conditions. In sharp contrast, using APCI with either neat benzene or neat carbon disulfide as the reagent resulted in the ionization of all the analytes studied to predominantly yield stable molecular ions. Benzene yielded a larger fraction of protonated molecules than carbon disulfide, which is a disadvantage. A similar but minor amount of fragmentation was observed for these two reagents. When the experiment was performed without a liquid reagent (nitrogen gas was the reagent), more fragmentation was observed. Analysis of a known mixture as well as a petroleum cut was also carried out. In summary, the new experiment presented here allows the evaporation of thermally labile compounds, both polar and nonpolar, without dissociation or aggregation, and their ionization to predominantly form stable molecular ions.


Analytical Chemistry | 2013

Development of a high-throughput laser-induced acoustic desorption probe and raster sampling for laser-induced acoustic desorption/atmospheric pressure chemical ionization.

David J. Borton; Lucas M. Amundson; Matthew R. Hurt; Alex R. Dow; Jeremy T. Madden; Garth J. Simpson; Hilkka I. Kenttämaa

Laser-induced acoustic desorption (LIAD) was recently coupled to atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) and shown to be of great utility for the analysis of a variety of thermally labile nonpolar analytes that are not amenable to ionization via electrospray ionization, such as nonvolatile hydrocarbons. Despite these advancements, LIAD still suffered from several limitations, including only being able to sample a small fraction of the analyte molecules deposited on a Ti foil for desorption, poor reproducibility, as well as limited laser power throughput to the backside of the foil. These limitations severely hinder the analysis of especially challenging analytes, such as asphaltenes. To address these issues, a novel high-throughput LIAD probe and an assembly for raster sampling of a LIAD foil were designed, constructed, and tested. The new probe design allows 98% of the initial laser power to be realized at the backside of the foil over the 25% achieved previously, thus improving reproducibility and allowing for the analysis of large nonvolatile analytes, including asphaltenes. The raster assembly provided a 5.7 fold increase in the surface area of a LIAD foil that could be sampled and improved reproducibility and sensitivity for LIAD experiments. The raster assembly can also improve throughput as foils containing multiple analytes can be prepared and analyzed.


Energy & Fuels | 2010

Molecular Structures of Asphaltenes Based on the Dissociation Reactions of Their Ions in Mass Spectrometry

David J. Borton; David S. Pinkston; Matthew R. Hurt; Xiaoli Tan; Khalid Azyat; Alexander Scherer; Rik R. Tykwinski; Murray R. Gray; Kuangnan Qian; Hilkka I. Kenttämaa


Energy & Fuels | 2013

Comparison of the Structures of Molecules in Coal and Petroleum Asphaltenes by Using Mass Spectrometry

Matthew R. Hurt; David J. Borton; Heewon J. Choi; Hilkka I. Kenttämaa


Energy & Fuels | 2015

Structural Comparison of Asphaltenes of Different Origins Using Multi-stage Tandem Mass Spectrometry

Weijuan Tang; Matthew R. Hurt; Huaming Sheng; James S. Riedeman; David J. Borton; Peter N. Slater; Hilkka I. Kenttämaa


Energy & Fuels | 2012

Separation of Asphaltenes by Reversed-Phase Liquid Chromatography with Fraction Characterization

Thomas N. Loegel; Neil D. Danielson; David J. Borton; Matthew R. Hurt; Hilkka I. Kenttämaa


Archive | 2012

Chambre de dépôt d'échantillons pour feuilles de désorption acoustique induite par laser (liad)

David J. Borton; Benitez Nelson R. Vinueza; Lucas M. Amundson; Matthew R. Hurt; Hilkka I. Kenttämaa


Archive | 2012

SAMPLE DEPOSITION CHAMBER FOR LASER-INDUCED ACOUSTIC DESORPTION (LIAD) FOILS

David J. Borton; Nelson R. Vinueza Benitez; Lucas M. Amundson; Matthew R. Hurt; Hilkka I. Kenttämaa

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