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Dive into the research topics where Jaanus Liigand is active.

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Featured researches published by Jaanus Liigand.


Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2013

Sodium adduct formation efficiency in ESI source.

Anneli Kruve; Karl Kaupmees; Jaanus Liigand; Merit Oss; Ivo Leito

Formation of sodium adducts in electrospray (ESI) has been known for long time, but has not been used extensively in practice, and several important aspects of Na(+) adduct formation in ESI source have been almost unexplored: the ionization efficiency of different molecules via Na(+) adduct formation, its dependence on molecular structure and Na(+) ion concentration in solution, fragmentation behaviour of the adducts as well as the ruggedness (a prerequisite for wider practical use) of ionization via Na(+) adduct formation. In this work, we have developed a parameter describing sodium adducts formation efficiency (SAFE) of neutral molecules and have built a SAFE scale that ranges for over four orders of magnitude and contains 19 compounds. In general, oxygen bases have higher efficiency of Na(+) adducts formation than nitrogen bases because of the higher partial negative charge on oxygen atoms and competition from protonation in the case of nitrogen bases. Chelating ability strongly increases the Na(+) adduct formation efficiency. We show that not only protonation but also Na(+) adduct formation is a quantitative and reproducible process if relative measurements are performed.


Analytical Chemistry | 2014

Negative Electrospray Ionization via Deprotonation: Predicting the Ionization Efficiency

Anneli Kruve; Karl Kaupmees; Jaanus Liigand; Ivo Leito

Electrospray ionization (ESI) in the negative ion mode has received less attention in fundamental studies than the positive ion electrospray ionization. In this paper, we study the efficiency of negative ion formation in the ESI source via deprotonation of substituted phenols and benzoic acids and explore correlations of the obtained ionization efficiency values (logIE) with different molecular properties. It is observed that stronger acids (i.e., fully deprotonated in the droplets) yielding anions with highly delocalized charge [quantified by the weighted average positive sigma (WAPS) parameter rooted in the COSMO theory] have higher ionization efficiency and give higher signals in the negative-ion ESI/MS. A linear model was obtained, which equally well describes the logIE of both phenols and benzoic acids (R(2) = 0.83, S = 0.40 log units) and contains only an ionization degree in solution (α) and WAPS as molecular parameters. Both parameters can easily be calculated with the COSMO-RS method. The model was successfully validated using a test set of acids belonging neither to phenols nor to benzoic acids, thereby demonstrating its broad applicability and the universality of the above-described relationships between IE and molecular properties.


Analytical Chemistry | 2015

Unified pH Values of Liquid Chromatography Mobile Phases

Agnes Suu; Lauri Jalukse; Jaanus Liigand; Anneli Kruve; Daniel Himmel; Ingo Krossing; Martí Rosés; Ivo Leito

This work introduces a conceptually new approach of measuring pH of mixed-solvent liquid chromatography (LC) mobile phases. Mobile phase pH is very important in LC, but its correct measurement is not straightforward, and all commonly used approaches have deficiencies. The new approach is based on the recently introduced unified pH (pH(abs)) scale, which enables direct comparison of acidities of solutions made in different solvents based on chemical potential of the proton in the solutions. This work represents the first experimental realization of the pH(abs) concept using differential potentiometric measurement for comparison of the chemical potentials of the proton in different solutions (connected by a salt bridge), together with earlier published reference points for obtaining the pH(abs) values (referenced to the gas phase) or pH(abs)(H₂O) values (referenced to the aqueous solution). The liquid junction potentials were estimated in the framework of Izutsus three-component method. pH(abs) values for a number of common LC and LC-MS mobile phases have been determined. The pH(abs) scale enables for the first time direct comparison of acidities of any LC mobile phases, with different organic additives, different buffer components, etc. A possible experimental protocol of putting this new approach into chromatographic practice has been envisaged and its applicability tested. It has been demonstrated that the ionization behavior of bases (cationic acids) in the mobile phases can be better predicted by using the pH(abs)(H₂O) values and aqueous pKa values than by using the alternative means of expressing mobile phase acidity. Description of the ionization behavior of acids on the basis of pH(abs)(H₂O) values is possible if the change of their pKa values with solvent composition change is taken into account.


Analytical Chemistry | 2016

Establishing Atmospheric Pressure Chemical Ionization Efficiency Scale

Riin Rebane; Anneli Kruve; Piia Liigand; Jaanus Liigand; Koit Herodes; Ivo Leito

Recent evidence has shown that the atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) mechanism can be more complex than generally assumed. In order to better understand the processes in the APCI source, for the first time, an ionization efficiency scale for an APCI source has been created. The scale spans over 5 logIE (were IE is ionization efficiency) units and includes 40 compounds with a wide range of chemical and physical properties. The results of the experiments show that for most of the compounds the ionization efficiency order in the APCI source is surprisingly similar to that in the ESI source. Most of the compounds that are best ionized in the APCI source are not small volatile molecules. Large tetraalkylammonium cations are a prominent example. At the same time, low-polarity hydrocarbons pyrene and anthracene are ionized in the APCI source but not in the ESI source. These results strongly imply that in APCI several ionization mechanisms operate in parallel and a mechanism not relying on evaporation of neutral molecules from droplets has significantly higher influence than commonly assumed.


Analytical Chemistry | 2017

Think Negative: Finding the Best Electrospray Ionization/MS Mode for Your Analyte

Piia Liigand; Karl Kaupmees; Kristjan Haav; Jaanus Liigand; Ivo Leito; Marion Girod; Rodolphe Antoine; Anneli Kruve

For the first time, the electrospray ionization efficiency (IE) scales in positive and negative mode are united into a single system enabling direct comparison of IE values across ionization modes. This is made possible by the use of a reference compound that ionizes to a similar extent in both positive and negative modes. Thus, choosing the optimal (i.e., most sensitive) ionization conditions for a given set of analytes is enabled. Ionization efficiencies of 33 compounds ionizing in both modes demonstrate that, contrary to general practice, negative mode allows better sensitivity for 46% of such compounds whereas the positive mode is preferred for only 18%, and for 36%, the results for both modes are comparable.


Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2015

Transferability of the Electrospray Ionization Efficiency Scale between Different Instruments

Jaanus Liigand; Anneli Kruve; Piia Liigand; Asko Laaniste; Marion Girod; Rodolphe Antoine; Ivo Leito

AbstractFor the first time, quantitative electrospray (ESI) ionization efficiencies (IE), expressed as logIE values, obtained on different mass-spectrometric setups (four mass analyzers and four ESI sources) are compared for 15 compounds of diverse properties. The general trends of change of IE with molecular structure are the same with all experimental setups. The obtained IE scales could be applied on different setups: there were no statistically significant changes in the order of ionization efficiency and the root mean of squared differences of the logIE values of compounds between the scales compiled on different instruments were found to be between 0.21 and 0.55 log units. The results show that orthogonal ESI source geometry gives better differentiating power and additional pneumatic assistance improves it even more. It is also shown that the ionization efficiency values are transferable between different mass-spectrometric setups by three anchoring points and a linear model. The root mean square error of logIE prediction ranged from 0.24 to 0.72 depending on the instrument. This work demonstrates for the first time the inter-instrument transferability of quantitative electrospray ionization efficiency data. Graphical Abstractᅟ


Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2017

pH Effects on Electrospray Ionization Efficiency

Jaanus Liigand; Asko Laaniste; Anneli Kruve

AbstractElectrospray ionization efficiency is known to be affected by mobile phase composition. In this paper, a detailed study of analyte ionization efficiency dependence on mobile phase pH is presented. The pH effect was studied on 28 compounds with different chemical properties. Neither pKa nor solution phase ionization degree by itself was observed to be sufficient at describing how aqueous phase pH affects the ionization efficiency of the analyte. Therefore, the analyte behavior was related to various physicochemical properties via linear discriminant analyses. Distinction between pH-dependent and pH-independent compounds was achieved using two parameters: number of potential charge centers and hydrogen bonding acceptor capacity (in the case of 80% acetonitrile) or polarity of neutral form of analyte and pKa (in the case of 20% acetonitrile). It was also observed that decreasing pH may increase ionization efficiency of a compound by more than two orders of magnitude. Graphical Abstractᅟ


Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2018

A systematic approach toward comparing electrospray ionization efficiencies of derivatized and non-derivatized amino acids and biogenic amines

Artur Gornischeff; Jaanus Liigand; Riin Rebane

Ionization efficiency (IE) in mass spectrometry (MS) has been studied for many different compounds, and different IE scales have been constructed in order to quantitatively characterize IE. In the case of MS, derivatization has been used to increase the sensitivity of the method and to lower the limits of detection. However, the influence of derivatization on IE across different compounds and different derivatization reagents has not been thoroughly researched, so that practitioners do not have information on the IE-enhancing abilities of different derivatization reagents. Moreover, measuring IE via direct infusion of compounds cannot be considered fully adequate. Since derivatized compounds are in complex mixtures, a chromatographic method is needed to separate these compounds to minimize potential matrix effects. In this work, an IE measurement system with a chromatographic column was developed for mainly amino acids and some biogenic amines. IE measurements with liquid chromatography electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (LC/ESI/MS) were carried out, and IE scales were constructed with a calibration curve for compounds with and without derivatization reagent diethyl ethoxymethylenemalonate. Additionally, eluent composition effects on ionization were investigated. Results showed that derivatization increases IE for most of the compounds (by average 0.9 and up to 2-2.5 logIE units) and derivatized compounds have more similar logIE values than without derivatization. Mobile phase composition effects on ionization efficiencies were negligible. It was also noted that the use of chromatographic separation instead of flow injection mode slightly increases IE. In this work, for the first time, IE enhancement of derivatization reagents was quantified under real LC/ESI/MS conditions and obtained logIE values of derivatized compounds were linked with the existing scale.


Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2014

Effect of Mobile Phase on Electrospray Ionization Efficiency

Jaanus Liigand; Anneli Kruve; Ivo Leito; Marion Girod; Rodolphe Antoine


ChemistrySelect | 2018

Modifying the Acidity of Charged Droplets

Mari Ojakivi; Jaanus Liigand; Anneli Kruve

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