Dear all,
I have tried to identify some impurities from the stability test of Piv-glucose-Br (glucose with Br and four OPiv substituted), for all the impurities and this compound, in their mass spectra, I could see two prominent peaks correponding to [M+Na]+ and [M+2Na]+. I also searched some literatures, in one literature, these guys also find these two prominent peaks for the glucose using different LC-MS (Agilent MSD, but ours are Thero LTQ). Obviously, the dimers are not formed because of the high concentration since they are all just some impurities in my sample.
Could anybody tell me that why in the sugar compounds, the sodium dimer ions are so easily formed? Also, why the [M+Na]+ is the prominent peak?
Thank you so much!
Just to be clear, an impurity means that your compound contains something that is not supposed to be there. If the adducts and/or dimers you are seeing are only formed in the ion source, then they are not actually impurities - just part of a diverse group of ions that is formed when your compound is run through the LC/MS.
To be sure, if you're actually injecting on an LC column and you see the sodium adducts come out *at a different retention time* than your target compound, now it's something you can call an impurity. But if you just see these signals coming out at the same time as your compound after LC separation, it's just a matter of which ions are formed in-source.
What is your mobile phase? Definitely try having some ammonium acetate or ammonium formate in there. If you see [M+NH4]+ or [M+H] start to appear at the expense of the sodium adduct, then the sodium was probably just an in-source effect.
Even when sodium hasn't been added to the mobile phase, trace amounts (as well as potassium) leach out from glass and other contaminant sources, and can have a very high affinity for certain molecules during ionization. Since these are created as a result of *uncontrolled* sodium levels, you're best to use a dilute ammonium buffer to flood the mobile phase with desired ions in order to get molecular (or ammoniated) ions that come about as a result of controlled conditions.