Butler, Matías

Associate Researcher  CONICET

Associate Professor ECyT UNSAM

mbutler@unsam.edu.ar

 

CONICET Profile

scopus author ID: 14830289100

orcid:  0000-0001-8932-5183

 

Professional resume

Specialized in mass spectrometry analysis applied to the determination and structural characterization of organic pollutants and their transformation products.

Researcher (CONICET) and undergraduate professor (UNSAM).

PhD Chemistry and graduate degree in Chemistry, Universidad de Buenos Aires.

More than ten articles published in international peer reviewed journals.

 

Expertise

Development of methodologies based on mass spectrometry for the determination of organic pollutants and their transformation products. Chemical analysis of pollutants allows to study the presence of these compounds in the environment, to estimate their concentration levels, to identify their sources and to determine their degradation products. Identification of transformation products allows to understand their reactivity and stability, being useful for the development of bioremediation strategies, toxicologic and metabolic studies, as well as the analysis of environmental samples and the assessment of efficiencies of treatment processes.

 

Keywords

Mass spectrometry; Organic pollutants; Transformation products.

 

Most important publications

1) Butler, M., Arroyo Mañez, P.; Cabrera, G. M. An experimental and computational study on the dissociation behavior of hydroxypyridine N‐oxides in atmospheric pressure ionization mass spectrometry. J Mass Spectrom , 2010, 45, 536-544. https://doi.org/10.1002/jms.1739

2) Butler, M.; Arroyo Mañez, P.; Cabrera, G. M.; Maitre, P. Gas Phase Structure and Reactivity of Doubly Charged Microhydrated Calcium(II)–Catechol Complexes Probed by Infrared Spectroscopy. J. Phys. Chem. A 2014, 27, 4942–4954. https://doi.org/10.1021/jp503789j

3) Butler, M., Siu, K. W. M., Hopkinson, A. C. Transnitrosylation products of the dipeptide cysteinyl–cysteine: an examination by tandem mass spectrometry and density functional theory. Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2016,18, 6047-6052. https://doi.org/10.1039/C5CP08014B

4) Bracco, E., Butler, M., Carnelli, P. et al. TiO2 and N-TiO2-photocatalytic degradation of salicylic acid in water: characterization of transformation products by mass spectrometry. Environ Sci Pollut Res, 2020, 27, 28469–28479. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11356-019-06045-6