Abstract

The combination of ion-mobility (IM) separation with mass spectrometry (MS) has impacted global measurement efforts in areas ranging from food analysis to drug discovery. Reasons for the broad adoption of IM-MS include its significantly increased peak capacity, duty-cycle, and ability to reconstruct fragmentation data in parallel, all of which greatly enable the analyses of complex mixtures. More fundamentally, however, measurements of ion-gas molecule collision cross sections (CCSs) are used to support compound identification and quantitation efforts as well as study the structures of large biomolecules. As the first commercialized form of IM-MS, Traveling Wave Ion Mobility (TWIM) devices are operated at low pressures (∼3 mbar) and voltages, are relatively short (∼25 cm), and separate ions on a timescale of tens of milliseconds. These qualities make TWIM ideally suited for hybridization with MS. Owing to the complicated motion of ions in TWIM devices, however, IM transit times must be calibrated to enable CCS measurements. Applicability of these calibrations has hitherto been restricted to primarily singly charged small molecules and some classes of large, multiply charged ions under a significantly narrower range of instrument conditions. Here, we introduce and extensively characterize a dramatically improved TWIM calibration methodology. Using over 2500 experimental TWIM data sets, covering ions that span over 3.5 orders of magnitude of molecular mass, we demonstrate robust calibrations for a significantly expanded range of instrument conditions, thereby opening up new analytical application areas and enabling the expansion of high-precision CCS measurements for both existing and next-generation TWIM instrumentation.

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