Abstract

Several 2H-chromenes derived from carbazoles were analyzed by electrospray tandem mass spectrometry. The 2H-chromenes constitute an important class of compounds that exhibit photochromic activity. The fragmentation pathways of the protonated molecular species [M+H]+ were studied, and main fragmentation pathways of these compounds were identified. Fragmentation pathways of [M+D]+ ions were also studied in order to obtain information about the location of the ionizing proton or deuteron. It was found that the proton is not preferentially located on the nitrogen atom. The charge is preferentially located as a tertiary carbocation, resulting from the uptake of the proton (or deuteron) by the zwitterionic open structure of the chromenes. The major fragmentation occurred by cleavage of the gamma-bond relative to the carbocation center, leading to a fragment at m/z 191 (C5H11+ or C14H9N+), which are the most abundant fragment ions for almost all compounds. The presence of substituents in the chromene ring does not change this behavior. Other observed common fragmentation pathways included loss of CH3* (15 Da), loss of CO (28 Da), combined loss of CO and CH3 (43 Da), and loss of the phenyl ring via combined loss of C6H4 and CH3* (-91 Da) and combined loss of C6H6 and CO (-106 Da).

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