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TULANE UNIVERSITY. Tulane University Department of Chemistry. The use of ion-mobility spectrometry-mass spectrometry to elucidate polymer architecture. Scott M. Grayson, 1 * Casey D. Foley 2 , Boyu Zhang 1 , Alina M. Alb 3 , Sarah Trimpin 2
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TULANE UNIVERSITY Tulane University Department of Chemistry The use of ion-mobility spectrometry-mass spectrometry to elucidate polymer architecture Scott M. Grayson,1* Casey D. Foley2, Boyu Zhang1, Alina M. Alb3, Sarah Trimpin2 1 Department of Chemistry, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA 2 Department of Chemistry, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI 3 Department of Physics, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA
IMS-MS instrumental set-up WATERS SYNAPT G2 Vacuum Mass-Separation Regime Gas-Phase Size-Separation Regime Ion Mobility Spectrometry (IMS) – ESI Mass Spectrometry (MS) enables tandem measurement of size and molecular weight
Separation by mass/charge Gas (N2) ● IMS separates components by size and charge (drift time) ● ToF-MS separates components by molecular weight and charge (m/z) Can IMS-MS distinguish different polymer architectures?
Synthesis of Poly(e-caprolactone) architectures: Linear and Cyclic Dr. Jessica N. Hoskins “c-PCL” “l-PCL-OH” Identical Mn, Mw, differing only in architecture Incomplete end group functionalization or click cyclization may yield linear impurities “l-PCL-alk” Laurent, B. A.; Grayson, S. M. J. Am. Chem. Soc,. 2006,128, 4328-4329. Hoskins, J. N.; Grayson, S. M. Macromolecules, 2009, 42, 6406-6413.
IMS-MS analysis of linear PCL Non-linearity of each charge state suggests change in confirmation with respect to change in m/z Higher m/z More Compact Dm/z114 / 2 = 57 [M+2Li]+2 [M+3Li]+3 [M+4Li]+4 [M+5Li]+5 and higher charge states Dm/z114 / 3 = 38 Lower m/z More Extended Dm/z114 / 4 = 28.5 Smaller size Larger size Hoskins, J. N.; Trimpin, S.; Grayson, S. M. Macromolecules, 2011, 44, 6915-6918.
IMS-MS comparison of linear & cyclic PCL Comparison of linear and cyclic architectures in the [M+2Li]2+ charge state Conditions: analyte 20 pmolμL-1 in 50:50 acetonitrile : isopropanol with 0.1% LiCl Dr. Jessica N. Hoskins 24-mer More compact 21-mer 22-mer shift to more compact configuration m/z More extended 10-mer 11-mer 10-mer Drift Time (Bins) Hoskins, J. N.; Trimpin, S.; Grayson, S. M. Macromolecules, 2011, 44, 6915-6918.
IMS-MS architectural analysis ● Can discern regioisomers:n-Bu vs. t-Bu in poly(butylmethacrylate): Trimpin, S.; Clemmer, D. E. Anal. Chem. 2008, 80, 9073−9083. ● Can discern topologies: linear vs. cyclic polymers: Hoskins, J. N.; Trimpin, S.; Grayson, S. M. Macromolecules, 2011, 44, 6915-6918. Li, X.; Guo, L.; Casiano-Maldonado, M.; Zhang, D.; Wesdemiotis, C. Macromolecules 2011, 44, 4555−4564. Josse, T.; De Winter, J.; Dubois, P.; Coulembier, O.; Gerbaux,P.; Memboeuf, A. Polym. Chem. 2015, 6, 64−69. ● Can discern stars with differing numbers of arms: Morsa, D.; Defize, T.; Dehareng, D.; Jerome, C.; de Pauw, E. Anal. Chem. 2014, 86, 9693−9700. ● Can discern stereoisomers: D- vs. L- polylactide: Kim, K.; Lee, J. W.; Chang, T.; Kim, H. I. J. Am. Soc. Mass Spectrom. 2014, 25, 1771−1779. But can IMS-MS distinguish architectural dispersity? Can it resolve pure architectures vs. mixed architectures?
Importance of Branching ● Branching remains one of the key properties of polymers for determining their usage, but remains challenging to quantify LDPE LLDPE HDPE ● 0.915-0.925 g/cm3 ● 0.940-0.960 g/cm3 ● 0.910-0.940 g/cm3 ● <0.1 % of repeating units are branch points, as quantified by 13C NMR. ● ~1.6 % of repeating units are branch points, as quantified by 13C NMR. ● ~1.3-1.8 % of repeating units are branch points, as quantified by 13C NMR. ● Very few side chains due to use of transition metal catalysts ● Exclusively well-defined branching from olefin monomers ● Both short and long branches off of main chain ● $33,000,000,000 global market in 2013 ● $40,000,000,000 global market in 2013 ● 30,000,000 tons global market in 2007 ● Most analytical techniques measure the average branching of an entire sample, but are their techniques for measuring the dispersity of branching within a sample?
Library of Branched Stars Synthetic Scheme: Dr. Boyu Zhang (commercially available) linear, 1 3-arm mikto-star, 2 3-arm homo-star, 4 4-arm homo-star, 3 Zhang, B.; Zhang, H.; Elupula, R.; Alb, A.; Grayson, S. Macromol. Rapid Commun. 2014, 35, 146.
Mass Range Analyzed Mass Range 8500-9700 LINEAR, 1 ● In order to enable the side-by-side comparison of different polymer architectures by IMS-MS, they need to be compared in the same m/z range and the same charge state. 3-ARM MIKTO STAR, 2 MALDI-TOF mass spectra 3-ARM HOMO STAR, 4 ● The versatile click-conjugation approach provide a library of PEG stars where the number of arms as well as the length of the arms could be tailored. 4-ARM HOMO STAR, 3 7000 8000 9000 10000 m/z
Determination of Branching via Viscometry ● Traditional polymer characterization using viscometry coupled with MALDI-ToF MS or light scattering can measure increased extent of branching, but yield only one data point per polymer sample (cannot measure branching dispersity). [h] = (0.067)M(0.55) ● Samples with increasing branching (e.g. 3-arm mikto-star and 4-arm homo-star) exhibit decreasing viscosity, as predicted. ● However, binary mixtures of linear and highly branched cannot be distinguished from a pure, lightly branched.
Analysis of Star Library by IMS-MS 3-ARM HOMO STAR, 4 LINEAR, 1 +7 +7 Due to the volume of data, we need to carefully select the region for further analysis 4-ARM HOMO STAR, 3 3-ARM MIKTO STAR, 2 +7 +7
+7 LINEAR, 1 Comparison of [M+7Cs]7+ Charge State of Star Library 100 % +8 1397 m/z Conditions: 25 μM PEG analyte in 50:50 water : acetonitrile with 1:10 ratio of cesium acetate to polymer 1348 ● In order to optimize differentiation, polymers should be compared in the same charge state, and with a high enough number of charges to distinguish conformational flexibility. 10.92 Drift time (ms) 15.33 3-ARM MIKTO-STAR, 2 +7 100 % +6 +7 +7 ● Direct comparison of the linear, 3-arm mikto-star and 4-arm homo-star confirm that the more compact architectures exhibit reduced drift times. 100 1397 % +8 m/z 1397 ● One of the most unique and promising aspects of IMS-MS is the ability to resolve different architectures within a single sample. 1348 m/z 15.33 10.92 Drift time (ms) 1348 4-ARM HOMO-STAR, 3 10.92 15.33 +7 Drift time (ms) % 100 1397 m/z Foley, C. D.; Zhang, B.; Alb, A. M.; Trimpin, S.; Grayson, S. M. ACS Macro Letters, 2015, 4, online ASAP. 1348 10.92 Drift time (ms) 15.33
Conclusion [h] = (0.067)M(0.55) ● The richness of the IMS-MS data sets are further demonstrated by the clear ability to generate a resolved drift time and m/z for every single n-mer within the polymer distribution. IMS-MS 1: linear 2: 3-arm mikto-star 4: 3-arm homo-star Average drift time (ms) ● This is in stark contrast to NMR, viscometry, light scattering, etc. which generate a single branching value as an average of an entire sample, and therefore is incapable of analyzing branching dispersity. 3: 4-arm homo-star Mass/charge (m/z) Viscometry Foley, C. D.; Zhang, B.; Alb, A. M.; Trimpin, S.; Grayson, S. M. ACS Macro Letters, 2015, 4, online ASAP.
Thank you for your attention! Graduate Fellowships Funding NSF-MRI CHE #0619770 NSF CAREER (ARRA) DMR #0844662 NSF-EPSCoR #1003897 NSF-EPSCoR IIA #1430280 NSF-CHE #1412439 NSF-DMR #1460637 Department of Chemistry Wayne State University Casey Foley Sarah Trimpin GoMRI 2012-II-798 Department of Physics Tulane University Alina Alb ACS-PRF 53980-ND7
Importance of Branching ● Branching remains one of the key properties of polymers for determining their usage, but remains challenging to quantify LDPE LLDPE HDPE ● 0.910-0.940 g/cm3 ● 0.915-0.925 g/cm3 ● 0.940-0.960 g/cm3 ● ~1.3-1.8 % of repeating units are branch points, as quantified by 13C NMR. ● ~1.6 % of repeating units are branch points, as quantified by 13C NMR. ● <0.1 % of repeating units are branch points, as quantified by 13C NMR. ● Both short and long branches off of main chain ● Exclusively well-defined branching from olefin monomers ● Very few side chains due to use of transition metal catalysts ● $33,000,000,000 global market in 2013 ● $40,000,000,000 global market in 2013 ● 30,000,000 tons global market in 2007 ● Most analytical techniques measure the average branching of an entire sample, but are their techniques for measuring the dispersity of branching within a sample?