Spray ionization methods involve the formation of aerosol particles from a liquid
solution and the formation of bare ions after solvent evaporation. Solvent-assisted ionization (SAI) is a method in which charged droplets are produced by introducing a solution containing analyte into a heated inlet tube of an atmospheric pressure ionization mass spectrometer. Just as in Electrospray Ionization (ESI), desolvation of the charged droplets produces multiply charged analyte ions. Volatile and nonvolatile compounds are analyzed by SAI, and high voltage is not required to achieve sensitivity comparable to ESI. Application of a voltage to the solution entering the hot inlet through a zero dead volume fitting connected to fused silica tubing produces ESI-like mass spectra, but with higher sensitivity. The inlet tube to the mass spectrometer becomes the ion source.
Matrix-Assisted Ionization Matrix-Assisted Ionization (MAI) is similar to MALDI in sample preparation, but a laser is not required to convert analyte molecules included in a matrix compound into gas-phase ions. In MAI, analyte ions have charge states similar to electrospray ionization but obtained from a solid matrix rather than a solvent. No voltage or laser is required, but a laser can be used to obtain spatial resolution for imaging. Matrix-analyte samples are ionized in the vacuum of a mass spectrometer and can be inserted into the vacuum through an atmospheric pressure inlet. Less volatile matrices such as 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid require a hot inlet tube to produce analyte ions by MAI, but more volatile matrices such as 3-nitrobenzonitrile require no heat, voltage, or laser. Simply introducing the matrix-analyte sample to the inlet aperture of an atmospheric pressure ionization mass spectrometer produces abundant ions. Compounds at least as large as bovine serum albumin [66 kDa] can be ionized with this method. In this method, the inlet to the mass spectrometer can be considered the ion source.
Atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization Atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization uses a solvent spray at atmospheric pressure. A spray of solvent is heated to relatively high temperatures (above 400 degrees Celsius), sprayed with high flow rates of nitrogen and the entire aerosol cloud is subjected to a
corona discharge that creates ions with the evaporated solvent acting as the chemical ionization reagent gas. APCI is not as "soft" (low fragmentation) an ionization technique as ESI. Note that atmospheric pressure ionization (API) should not be used as a synonym for APCI.
Thermospray ionization Thermospray ionization is a form of atmospheric pressure ionization in
mass spectrometry. It transfers ions from the liquid phase to the gas phase for analysis. It is particularly useful in
liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry.
Electrospray ionization In electrospray ionization, a liquid is pushed through a very small, charged and usually metal,
capillary. This liquid contains the substance to be studied, the
analyte, dissolved in a large amount of
solvent, which is usually much more
volatile than the analyte. Volatile acids, bases or buffers are often added to this solution as well. The analyte exists as an
ion in solution either in its anion or cation form. Because like charges repel, the liquid pushes itself out of the capillary and forms an aerosol, a mist of small droplets about 10
μm across. The aerosol is at least partially produced by a process involving the formation of a
Taylor cone and a jet from the tip of this cone. An uncharged carrier gas such as
nitrogen is sometimes used to help
nebulize the liquid and to help evaporate the neutral solvent in the droplets. As the solvent evaporates, the analyte molecules are forced closer together, repel each other and break up the droplets. This process is called Coulombic fission because it is driven by repulsive
Coulombic forces between charged molecules. The process repeats until the analyte is free of solvent and is a bare ion. The ions observed are created by the addition of a
proton (a hydrogen ion) and denoted , or of another
cation such as sodium ion, , or the removal of a proton, . Multiply charged ions such as {{chem2|[M + 2H]^{2+} }} are often observed. For
macromolecules, there can be many charge states, occurring with different frequencies; the charge can be as great as {{chem2|[M + 24H]^{24+} }}, for example.
Probe electrospray ionization Probe electrospray ionization (PESI) is a modified version of electrospray, where the capillary for sample solution transferring is replaced by a sharp-tipped solid needle with periodic motion.
Contactless atmospheric pressure ionization Contactless atmospheric pressure ionization is a technique used for analysis of liquid and solid samples by mass spectrometry. Contactless API can be operated without an additional electric power supply (supplying voltage to the source emitter), gas supply, or
syringe pump. Thus, the technique provides a facile means for analyzing chemical compounds by mass spectrometry at atmospheric pressure.
Sonic spray ionization Sonic spray ionization is method for creating ions from a liquid solution, for example, a mixture of methanol and water. A
pneumatic nebulizer is used to turn the solution into a
supersonic spray of small droplets. Ions are formed when the solvent evaporates and the statistically unbalanced charge distribution on the droplets leads to a net charge and complete desolvation results in the formation of ions. Sonic spray ionization is used to analyze small organic molecules and drugs and can analyze large molecules when an electric field is applied to the capillary to help increase the charge density and generate multiple charged ions of proteins. Sonic spray ionization has been coupled with
high performance liquid chromatography for the analysis of drugs. Oligonucleotides have been studied with this method. SSI has been used in a manner similar to desorption electrospray ionization for
ambient ionization and has been coupled with
thin-layer chromatography in this manner.
Ultrasonication-assisted spray ionization Ultrasonication-assisted spray ionization (UASI) is similar to the above techniques but uses an ultrasonic transducer to achieve atomization of the material and generate ions. ==Thermal ionization==