Development of HPLC-Orbitrap method for identification of N-bearing molecules in complex organic material relevant to planetary environments
Thomas Gautier, Isabelle Schmitz-Afonso, David Touboul, Cyril Szopa,, Arnaud Buch, Nathalie Carrasco

TL;DR
This study develops an HPLC-Orbitrap high-resolution mass spectrometry method to identify specific N-bearing molecules in complex organic aerosols called tholins, relevant to planetary environments like Titan.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel combined HPLC-HRMS technique for resolving isomeric compounds in tholins, improving molecular identification over previous methods.
Findings
Seven molecules were strictly identified in tholins samples.
The technique demonstrated advantages over single HRMS in complex organic analysis.
Certain expected molecules like hexamethylenetriamine were not detected.
Abstract
Although the Cassini Spacecraft and the Huygens lander provided numerous information about Titan atmospheric chemistry and the formation of its aerosols, the exact composition of these aerosols still remains unknown. A fruitful proxy to investigate these aerosols is the use of laboratory experiments that allow producing and studying analogs of Titan aerosol, the so35 called tholins. Even when produced in the laboratory, unveiling the exact composition of the aerosol remains problematic due to the high complexity of the material. Numerous advances have been recently made using high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) (Pernot et al. 2010, Somogyi et al. 2012, Gautier et al. 2014) that allowed the separation of isobaric compounds and a robust identification of chemical species composing tholins regarding their molecular formulae. Nevertheless isomeric species cannot be resolved by a simple…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric chemistry and aerosols · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
