Omar Hadjar
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by Omar Hadjar.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2008
Peng Wang; Omar Hadjar; Paul L. Gassman; Julia Laskin
Soft landing of mass-selected peptide ions onto reactive self-assembled monolayer surfaces (SAMs) was performed using a newly constructed ion deposition apparatus. SAM surfaces before and after soft landing were characterized ex situ using time-of-flight secondary-ion mass spectrometry (TOF-SIMS) and infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopy (IRRAS). We demonstrate that reactive landing (RL) results in efficient covalent linking of lysine-containing peptides onto the SAM of N-hydroxysuccinimidyl ester-terminated alkylthiol on gold (NHS-SAM). Systematic studies of the factors that affect the efficiency of RL revealed that the reaction takes place upon collision and is promoted by the kinetic energy of the ion. The efficiency of RL is maximized at ca. 40 eV collision energy. At high collision energies the RL efficiency decreases because of the competition with scattering of ions off the surface. The reaction yield is independent of the charge state of the projectile ions, suggesting that peptide ions undergo efficient neutralization upon collision. Chemical and physical properties of the SAM surface are also important factors that affect the outcome of RL. The presence of chemically reactive functional groups on the SAM surface significantly improves the reaction efficiency. RL of mass- and energy-selected peptide ions on surfaces provides a highly specific approach for covalent immobilization of biological molecules onto SAM surfaces.
Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2009
Omar Hadjar; Peng Wang; Jean H. Futrell; Julia Laskin
Charge reduction and desorption kinetics of ions and neutral molecules produced by soft-landing of mass-selected singly and doubly protonated Gramicidin S (GS) on different surfaces was studied using time dependant in situ secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) integrated in a specially designed Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometer (FT-ICR MS) research instrument. Soft-landing targets utilized in this study included inert self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of 1-dodecane thiol (HSAM) and its fluorinated analog (FSAM) on gold and hydrophilic carboxyl-terminated (COOH-SAM) and amine-terminated (NH2-SAM) surfaces. We observed efficient neutralization of soft-landed ions on the COOH-SAM surface, partial retention of only one proton on the HSAM surface, and efficient retention of two protons on the FSAM surface. Slow desorption rates measured experimentally indicate fairly strong binding between peptide molecules and SAM surfaces with the binding energy of 20–25 kcal/mol.
International Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 1999
Thomas Schlathölter; Omar Hadjar; J. Manske; Ronnie Hoekstra; R Morgenstern
Abstract Collisions of Heq+ ions with neutral fullerenes have been studied as a function of projectile velocity (v ≈ 0.1–1.0 a.u.) and charge state (q = 1, 2). With increasing velocity, two trends are observed for both charge states: The yield of C60−2mr+ clusters decreases with 1/v, as expected for quantities related to direct vibrational excitation. The relative cross section for multifragmentation increases linearly with v and can be associated with electronic excitations. The additional potential energy of He2+ with respect to He+ manifests in increased direct ionization cross sections (high v) and multifragmentation cross sections (low v), respectively, revealing information about coupling times between electronic and vibrational excitation.
Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2011
Omar Hadjar; Thomas Schlathölter; Stephen Davila; Shane A. Catledge; Ken Kuhn; Scott Kassan; Gottfried Kibelka; Chad Cameron; Guido F. Verbeck
A recently described ion charge coupled device detector IonCCD (Sinha and Wadsworth, Rev. Sci. Instrum. 76(2), 2005; Hadjar, J. Am. Soc. Mass Spectrom. 22(4), 612–624, 2011) is implemented in a miniature mass spectrometer of sector-field instrument type and Mattauch-Herzog (MH)-geometry (Rev. Sci. Instrum. 62(11), 2618–2620, 1991; Burgoyne, Hieftje and Hites J. Am. Soc. Mass Spectrom. 8(4), 307–318, 1997; Nishiguchi, Eur. J. Mass Spectrom. 14(1), 7–15, 2008) for simultaneous ion detection. In this article, we present first experimental evidence for the signature of energy loss the detected ion experiences in the detector material. The two energy loss processes involved at keV ion kinetic energies are electronic and nuclear stopping. Nuclear stopping is related to surface modification and thus damage of the IonCCD detector material. By application of the surface characterization techniques atomic force microscopy (AFM) and X-ray photoelectrons spectroscopy (XPS), we could show that the detector performance remains unaffected by ion impact for the parameter range observed in this study. Secondary electron emission from the (detector) surface is a feature typically related to electronic stopping. We show experimentally that the properties of the MH-mass spectrometer used in the experiments, in combination with the IonCCD, are ideally suited for observation of these stopping related secondary electrons, which manifest in reproducible artifacts in the mass spectra. The magnitude of the artifacts is found to increase linearly as a function of detected ion velocity. The experimental findings are in agreement with detailed modeling of the ion trajectories in the mass spectrometer. By comparison of experiment and simulation, we show that a detector bias retarding the ions or an increase of the B-field of the IonCCD can efficiently suppress the artifact, which is necessary for quantitative mass spectrometry.
Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2011
Grant E. Johnson; Omar Hadjar; Julia Laskin
A position sensitive pixel-based detector array, referred to as the IonCCD, has been employed to characterize the ion optics and ion beam focusing in a custom built mass spectrometer designed for soft and reactive landing of mass-selected ions onto surfaces. The IonCCD was placed at several stages along the path of the ion beam to determine the focusing capabilities of the various ion optics, which include an electrodynamic ion funnel, two radiofrequency (rf)-only collision quadrupoles, a mass resolving quadrupole, a quadrupole bender, and two einzel lens assemblies. The focusing capabilities of the rf-only collision quadrupoles and einzel lenses are demonstrated by large decreases in the diameter of the ion beam. In contrast, the mass resolving quadrupole is shown to significantly defocus the mass-selected ion beam resulting in an expansion of the measured ion beam diameter. Combined with SIMION simulations, we demonstrate that the IonCCD can identify minor errors in the alignment of charged-particle optics that result in erratic trajectories and significant deflections of the ion beam. This information may be used to facilitate the design, assembly, and maintenance of custom-built mass spectrometry instrumentation.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2008
Julia Laskin; Peng Wang; Omar Hadjar
22nd International Conference on Photonic, Electronic, Collisions | 2001
Thomas Schlathölter; Omar Hadjar; Jordy de Vries; Ronnie Hoekstra; R Morgenstern
Analytical Chemistry | 2007
Omar Hadjar; Peng Wang; Jean H. Futrell; Yury Dessiaterik; Zihua Zhu; James P. Cowin; Martin J. Iedema; Julia Laskin
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2007
Peng Wang; Omar Hadjar; Julia Laskin
Physical Review Letters | 1999
Thomas Schlathölter; Omar Hadjar; Ronnie Hoekstra; R Morgenstern