This is a demo store. No orders will be fulfilled.
Identification of the Electrogenerated Hidden Nitrenium Ions by In Situ Mass Spectrometry
The identification of the electrogenerated reactive intermediates is essential for an in-depth understanding of the electroredox processes. Although various short-lived intermediates are well characterized by coupling electrochemistry with mass spectrometry (EC/MS), many electrogenerated transient species (τ < 1 μs) are still rarely captured by the currently available EC/MS approaches. Here, we present a low-delay coupling device, which was constructed by decorating a microelectrode into the front tip of a microsized ion emitter. For the first time, the in situ detection of a previously hidden intermediate, i.e., the transient nitrenium ion of carbazole (τ = 333 ns), was achieved. The electrochemical generation of indole nitrenium ion, whose half-life is estimated to be shorter compared to the carbazole nitrenium ion due to less resonance stabilization, was also confirmed by direct observation. This clog-free microelectrode/ion emitter is cheap and easy to fabricate and offers a general and powerful approach to monitoring the fast reactions of electrogenerated reactive intermediates. We believe that our integrated EC/MS approach holds substantial potential for broad applicability, particularly in probing the intricate and ultrafast electroredox processes occurring at the electrode–solution interface.