OCR AS Chemistry

Revision Notes

4.7.2 Mass Spectrometry

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Interpreting Mass Spectra

  • When a compound is analysed in a mass spectrometer, vaporised molecules are bombarded with a beam of high-speed electrons
  • These knock off an electron from some of the molecules, creating molecular ions:

Interpreting Mass Spectra equation 1
  • The relative abundances of the detected ions form a mass spectrum: a kind of molecular fingerprint that can be identified by computer using a spectral database
  • The peak with the highest m/z value is the molecular ion (M+) peak which gives information about the molecular mass of the compound
  • This value of m/z is equal to the relative molecular mass of the compound

The M+1 peak

  • The [M+1] peak is a smaller peak which is due to the natural abundance of the isotope carbon-13
  • The height of the [M+1] peak for a particular ion depends on how many carbon atoms are present in that molecule; The more carbon atoms, the larger the [M+1] peak is
    • For example, the height of the [M+1] peak for an hexane (containing six carbon atoms) ion will be greater than the height of the [M+1] peak of an ethane (containing two carbon atoms) ion

Worked example

Determine whether the following mass spectrum belongs to propanal or butanalAnalytical Techniques Spec 1_Mass Spectrometry, downloadable AS & A Level Chemistry revision notes

Answer:

    • The mass spectrum corresponds to propanal as the molecular ion peak is at m/z = 58
    • Propanal arises from the CH3CH2CHO+ ion which has a molecular mass of 58
    • Butanal arises from the CH3CH2CH2CHO+ ion which has a molecular mass of 72

Fragmentation Peaks in Mass Spectra

  • The molecular ion peak can be used to identify the molecular mass of a compound
  • However, different compounds may have the same molecular mass
  • To further determine the structure of the unknown compound, fragmentation analysis is used
  • Fragments may appear due to the formation of characteristic fragments or the loss of small molecules
    • For example, a peak at 29 is due to the characteristic fragment C2H5+­­
    • Loss of small molecules gives rise to differences between peaks of, for example, 18 (H2O), 28 (CO), and 44 (CO2)
    • An alcohol can typically dehydrate in a MS, so one peak to look for is M-18

Alkanes

  • Simple alkanes are fragmented in mass spectroscopy by breaking the C-C bonds
  • M/z values of some of the common alkane fragments are given in the table below

m/z values of Fragments Table

Analytical Techniques - m_e values of fragments table, downloadable AS & A Level Chemistry revision notes

Analytical Techniques Alkane Spectrum, downloadable AS & A Level Chemistry revision notes

Mass spectrum showing fragmentation of alkanes

Alcohols

  • Alcohols often tend to lose a water molecule giving rise to a peak at 18 below the molecular ion
  • Another common peak is found at m/e value 31 which corresponds to the CH2OH+­­ fragment
  • For example, the mass spectrum of propan-1-ol shows that the compound has fragmented in four different ways:
    • Loss of H to form a C3H7O+ fragment with m/e = 59
    • Loss of a water molecule to form a C3H6+ fragment with m/e = 42
    • Loss of a C2H5 to form a CH2OH+ fragment with m/e = 31
    • And the loss of CH2OH to form a C2H5+ fragment with m/e = 29

Analytical Techniques Alcohols Spectrum_2, downloadable AS & A Level Chemistry revision notes

Mass spectrum showing the fragmentation patterns in propan-1-ol (alcohol)

Worked example

Alcohol fragmentation

Which alcohol is not likely to have a fragment ion at m/z at 43 in its mass spectrum?

  1. (CH3)2CHCH2OH
  2. CH3CH(OH)CH2CH2CH3
  3. CH3CH2CH2CH2OH
  4. CH3CH2CH(OH)CH3

Answer

The correct answer is option D

    • Because a line at m/z = 43 corresponds to an ion with a mass of 43 for example:
      • [CH3CH2CH2]+
      • [(CH3)2CH]+
    • 2-butanol is not likely to have a fragment at m/z = 43 as it does not have either of these fragments in its structure.

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