Measurement of collision cross section (CCS), a parameter
reflecting
an ion’s size and shape, alongside high-resolution mass analysis
extends the depth of molecular analysis by providing structural information
beyond molecular mass alone. Although these measurements are most
commonly undertaken using a dedicated ion mobility cell coupled to
a mass spectrometer, alternative methods have emerged to extract CCSs
directly by analysis of the decay rates of either time-domain transient
signals or the FWHM of frequency domain peaks in FT mass analyzers.
This information is also accessible from FTMS mass spectra obtained
in commonly used workflows directly without the explicit access to
transient or complex Fourier spectra. Previously, these experiments
required isolation of individual charge states of ions prior to CCS
analysis, limiting throughput. Here we advance Orbitrap CCS measurements
to more users and applications by determining CCSs from commonly available
mass spectra files as well as estimating CCS for multiple charge states
simultaneously and showcase these methods by the measurement of CCSs
of fragment ions produced from collisional activation of proteins.