German
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HELP! Tiny differences in MW??? 253.33 vs 253.44
So I am doing two different procedures to get to target compound 253.33. The first procedure uses a few reagents and according to LCMS has mostly
253.33 but a bunch of other smaller junk peaks. The second procedure uses 1 reagent and is very clean showing just a peak of 253.44 with another minor
peak. I have run both procedures many times over the last 8 months and always sent them to a professional lab for LCMS and every time the dirtier
procedure comes back as 253.33 and the other cleaner procedure comes back as 253.44. What accounts for this consistent tiny difference? Am I getting
two different compounds?
At first I attributed it just to the settings of the LCMS and I assumed both were producing the same compound since both procedures should produce the
same compound. But after month after month of getting the same results of 253.33 vs 253.44 there must be a real difference. But what in the world
could it be? 0.11 is way too light for even a simple proton and way too heavy for an electron. So what in the world explains it?
Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
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Sulaiman
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Try having your starting chemicals analysed,
maybe natually occuring variations in isotopes?
CAUTION : Hobby Chemist, not Professional or even Amateur
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AvBaeyer
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Your question is unanswerable in any helpful manner without a complete description of your chemistry. What are the reaction details for both
procedures?
AvB
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German
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I was with you until I thought about it.
The cleaner procedure that gives me the slightly off and heavier 253.44 I use just stannous chloride and methanol. But the dirtier procedure that
gives me the correct 253.33 I use the exact same stannous chloride and methanol but I also throw in catalytic amounts of ammonium chloride. So if the
procedure with the added ammonium chloride gave me the slightly heavier weight then based on your reasoning I could maybe say, "ok the hydrogens in
the ammonium chloride I have that are donated to the reaction are heavy hydrogens or some other isotope which is producing the slightly heavier
weight". But that is not the case. The procedure with the added ammonium chloride is giving me the correct lighter MW whereas the procedure giving the
heavier slightly off MW are the same exact reagents used in the other procedure (just missing the ammonium chloride). So the one procedure with the
one added reagent is actually giving the correct MW not the slightly heavier MW.
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clearly_not_atara
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Isotopic variations can happen in any element. You are talking about a 0.043% difference in molecular weight. The best available techniques have only
been able to constrain the atomic weight of sulfur within a range of 0.005%. So you are potentially within a factor of 10 of the best possible.
Meanwhile, the COTS mass spectrometer you are using is probably pretty accurate, but it can still be affected by things like field inhomogeneities,
induced currents, multipole effects etc leading to distorted m/z values. Unless we have a team of qualified physicists inspect your equipment, I don't
think you're going to find a good answer.
If you're observing identical physical and chemical properties and the LCMS MW difference is 0.04%, you're looking at two samples of the same
compound. As I tell my students, four significant figures is a lot...
[Edited on 10-2-2022 by clearly_not_atara]
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German
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^^^^ Well that answers that. Thank you.
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