Enantiomer-specific analysis of multi-component mixtures by correlated electron imaging-ion mass spectrometry

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Abstract

Simultaneous, enantiomer-specific identification of chiral molecules in multi-component mixtures is extremely challenging. Many established techniques for single-component analysis fail to provide selectivity in multi-component mixtures and lack sensitivity for dilute samples. Here we show how enantiomers may be differentiated by mass-selected photoelectron circular dichroism using an electron-ion coincidence imaging spectrometer. As proof of concept, vapours containing ∼1% of two chiral monoterpene molecules, limonene and camphor, are irradiated by a circularly polarized femtosecond laser, resulting in multiphoton near-threshold ionization with little molecular fragmentation. Large chiral asymmetries (2-4%) are observed in the mass-tagged photoelectron angular distributions. These asymmetries switch sign according to the handedness (R- or S-) of the enantiomer in the mixture and scale with enantiomeric excess of a component. The results demonstrate that mass spectrometric identification of mixtures of chiral molecules and quantitative determination of enantiomeric excess can be achieved in a table-top instrument.

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Fanood, M. M. R., Ram, N. B., Lehmann, C. S., Powis, I., & Janssen, M. H. M. (2015). Enantiomer-specific analysis of multi-component mixtures by correlated electron imaging-ion mass spectrometry. Nature Communications, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms8511

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