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Get Free AccessCollision-induced dissociation mass spectrometry (CID-MS) is an important tool in analytical chemistry for the structural elucidation of unknown compounds. The theoretical prediction of the CID spectra plays a critical role in supporting and accelerating this process. To this end, we adapt the recently developed QCxMS2 program originally designed for the calculation of electron ionization (EI) spectra to enable the computation of CID-MS. To account for the fragmentation conditions characteristic of CID within the automated reaction network discovery approach of QCxMS2 we adapted the internal energy distribution to match the experimental conditions. This distribution can be adjusted via a single parameter to approximate various activation settings, thereby eliminating the need for explicit simulations of the collisional process. We evaluate our approach on a test set of 13 organic molecules with diverse functional groups, compiled specifically for this study. All reference spectra were recorded consistently under the same measurement conditions, including both CID and higher-energy collisional dissociation (HCD) modes. Overall, QCxMS2 achieves a good average entropy similarity score (ESS) of 0.687 for the HCD spectra and 0.773 for the CID spectra. The direct comparison to experimental data demonstrates that the QCxMS2 approach, even without explicit modeling of collisions, is generally capable of computing both CID and HCD spectra with reasonable accuracy and robustness. This highlights its potential as a valuable tool for integration into structure elucidation workflows in analytical mass spectrometry.
Johannes Gorges, Marianne Engeser, Stefan Grimme (2025). Evaluation of the QCxMS2 Method for the Calculation of Collision-Induced Dissociation Spectra via Automated Reaction Network Exploration. , 36(10), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/jasms.5c00234.
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Type
Article
Year
2025
Authors
3
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
en
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1021/jasms.5c00234
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