Hello all,
I try to transfer an HPLC method to our mass spectrometry department for the quantification of a penicillin.
I use 50mM of Ammonium Acetate + 5% of CH3CN at ph7 as mobile phase.
My colleague says that this method will not work in HPLC/ESI because there is too much ammonium adduct.
Is there a trick to decrease ammonium adduct ?
Is it really annoying if we perform a calibration curve befor each quantification ?
Thanks for your help,
Laurent
First off, 50 mM ammonium acetate is way higher than really necessary. LC-MS tends to have optimal signal enhancement in the range of 0-5 mM. A bit of suppression from additives is okay, because it helps even out the possible enhancement/suppression that can result from sample matrix. But above 5 mM you're really getting into strong suppression territory.
Now, it's actually quite common to quantify off the ammonium adduct for compounds that get a better signal on that channel. Around 10-20% of the pesticides I'm analyzing are best seen via the ammonium adduct. As long as you are controlling the amount of ammonium present, you will get consistent results. Is there a reason you would prefer not to use the adduct?
If neutral pH is not essential for chromatography or stability, you could use 0.05-0.1% formic or acetic acid as a modifier.