This paper presents the results of the study on the course of the benzyl chloride (BzCl) ionization process in a drift tube ion mobility spectrometer (DT IMS) in which nitrogen was used as the carrier gas. BzCl ionization follows the dissociative electron capture mechanism. The chloride ions produced in this process take part in the formation of cluster ions. Using DT IMS allows for estimation of the value of the electron attachment rate for BzCl and the equilibrium constant for the cluster ion formation. The basic experimental method used in this work was to analyze drift time spectra obtained for the introduction of the sample to the spectrometer with the drift gas. The theoretical interpretation of the results is based on the mathematical description of the ion transport. This description takes into account the phenomenon of diffusion, as well as the processes of formation and dissociation of ionic clusters occurring during the movement of ions in the drift section.
Drift tube ion mobility spectrometers (DT IMS) allow the concentration of different organic compounds to be measured. This gives the opportunity to use these detectors in measuring the penetration of various substances through polymer membranes. Permeation measurements of two substances (2-heptanone and dimethyl methylphosphonate (DMMP)) through a cylindrical silicone rubber membrane were carried out. The membrane separated the aqueous solution from the air. The analyte was introduced into water, and then its concentration in air on the opposite side of the membrane was recorded. Based on the dynamics of detector signal changes, the diffusion coefficients for both tested substances were determined. Determination of permeability coefficients was based on precise quantitative measurements, which took into account the non-linearity of the detector characteristics and the effect of water on detection sensitivity. The analysis of measurement results was based on a mathematical description of diffusion process.
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