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An unprecedented rearrangement in collision‐induced mass spectrometric fragmentation of protonated benzylamines
Author(s) -
Bialecki Jason,
Ruzicka Josef,
Attygalle Athula B.
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
journal of mass spectrometry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.475
H-Index - 121
eISSN - 1096-9888
pISSN - 1076-5174
DOI - 10.1002/jms.1089
Subject(s) - chemistry , benzylamine , protonation , heterolysis , photochemistry , fluorobenzene , collision induced dissociation , dimethylamine , dissociation (chemistry) , methylene , medicinal chemistry , mass spectrum , ion , mass spectrometry , tandem mass spectrometry , organic chemistry , benzene , chromatography , catalysis
The collision‐induced dissociation (CID) mass spectra of several protonated benzylamines are described and mechanistically rationalized. Under collision‐induced decomposition conditions, protonated dibenzylamine, for example, loses ammonia, thereby forming an ion of m / z 181. Deuterium labeling experiments confirmed that the additional proton transferred to the nitrogen atom during this loss of ammonia comes from the ortho positions of the phenyl rings and not from the benzylic methylene groups. A mechanism based on an initial elongation of a CN bond at the charge center that eventually cleaves the CN bond to form an ion/neutral complex of benzyl cation and benzylamine is proposed to rationalize the results. The complex then proceeds to dissociate in several different ways: (1) a direct dissociation to yield a benzyl cation observed at m / z 91; (2) an electrophilic attack by the benzyl cation within the complex on the phenyl ring of the benzylamine to remove a pair of electrons from the aromatic sextet to form an arenium ion, which either donates a ring proton (or deuteron when present) to the amino group forming a protonated amine, which undergoes a charge‐driven heterolytic cleavage to eliminate ammonia (or benzylamine) forming a benzylbenzyl cation observed at m / z 181, or undergoes a charge‐driven heterolytic cleavage to eliminate diphenylmethane and an immonium ion; and (3) a hydride abstraction from a methylene group of the neutral benzylamine to the benzylic cation to eliminate toluene and form a substituted immonium ion. Corresponding benzylamine and dibenzylamine losses observed in the spectra of protonated tribenzylamine and tetrabenzyl ammonium ion, respectively, indicate that the postulated mechanism can be widely applied. The postulated mechanisms enabled proper prediction of mass spectral fragments expected from protonated butenafine, an antifungal drug. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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