Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1166784 Analytica Chimica Acta 2010 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Electrospray ionisation–mass spectrometry (ESI–MS) is used in a wide variety of fields to examine the formation, stoichiometry and speciation of complexes involving metals and organic ligands. This article reviews the literature in this area over the past 5 years, examining trends in ESI–MS use and novel applications that enhance the scope of the technique. ESI–MS can provide direct information on changes in speciation with metal:ligand ratio and pH, identify metal oxidation state directly and allow insight into competitive interactions in ternary systems. However, both the instrumental set-up and artefacts in the electrospraying process can affect the species distribution observed, and changes in solution chemistry can affect the relative ion intensity of species. Therefore, ESI–MS data is at its most powerful when corroborated by data from other experimental techniques, such as pH potentiometry. The challenges in interpreting direct ESI–MS data quantitatively are discussed in detail, with reference to differences in the ion intensities of species, signal suppression and quantifying species distributions. The use of HPLC–ESI–MS is also reviewed, highlighting challenges and applications. Overall, the need for more standard reporting of quality assurance data is discussed, to strengthen the applications of ESI–MS to metal–organic ligand complexes further.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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