Methods and systems for mass spectrometry and more particularly to an interface providing charged particles to a mass spectrometer are described herein.
Mass spectrometry is an analytical process for obtaining the molecular weight, chemical composition and structural information of a compound or sample based on the mass-to-charge ratio of charged particles. In general, in mass spectrometry, a sample undergoes ionization to form charged particles as ions; these charged particles are then passed through electric and/or magnetic fields to separate them according to their mass-to-charge ratio. The separated ions are then measured at a detector.
Mass spectrometers generally need to be operated at high vacuum (e.g., 10−4 to 10−6 Torr) to limit the interactions between ions and gas molecules within the mass spectrometer which would otherwise degrade performance. One challenge in mass spectrometry is providing an efficient method of getting representative ions from the sample into such a mass spectrometer vacuum system. In some mass spectrometry systems, the ionization process occurs within the vacuum envelope, but this limits the types of samples that can be analyzed to gas phase samples and solid samples that exhibit low vapor pressure.
Atmospheric Pressure Ionization (API) ion sources have become increasingly important as they have greatly increased the types of samples that can be measured by mass spectrometers. These sources form the ions at, or about, atmospheric pressure, outside the mass spectrometer and the ions and charged particles are transferred to the high vacuum region of the mass spectrometer through the Atmospheric Pressure Ionization (API) interface that generally includes a small ion inlet orifice or capillary and a transfer region that may contain a number of electric fields and intermediate vacuum stages to manipulate the charged particles and successively reduce the pressure.
This has allowed mass spectrometers to be interfaced to a large number of ionization techniques increasing the types of samples that can be measured, whether in gas, solid, or even liquid form. Exemplary ion sources include, but are not limited to, Electrospray Ionization (ESI), Atmospheric Chemical Ionization (APCI), Atmospheric Pressure Photo Ionization (APPI), Matrix Assisted Laser Ionization, (MALDI), Direct Analysis in Real Time (DART) and Desorption Electrospray Ionization (DESI). These ion sources have allowed mass spectrometers to be coupled to widely used tools such as High Performance Liquid Chromatography.
Ion sources such as ESI and APCI provide charged particles from liquid solutions of sample and solvent. The solution, including the molecules of interest, is pumped through an orifice or a capillary and an electric potential is either placed on the capillary (ESI) or a needle close to the mass analyzer. Coaxial nebulization gas may assist the formation of a plume of highly charged droplets from the capillary at atmospheric pressure. Since the ionization occurs directly from solution at atmospheric pressure, the ions formed in this process can sometimes be strongly solvated. Prior to measurement, the solvent molecules associated with the ions are removed. So the API interface performs many functions; it desolvates the charged droplets to form gas phase ions, it transfers these ions into the mass spectrometer analyzer maintained at high vacuum and removes the great majority of the air, gas and solvent molecules that enter the API interface with the ions.
The efficiency with which the API interface performs these functions determines the overall sensitivity of the system and other performance factors. In many API interfaces the pressure is reduced from atmosphere to high vacuum in one or more intermediate vacuum stages. With conventional API interfaces the number of ions that are sampled, and hence the sensitivity, are limited by the size of the apertures between the various stages. The larger the apertures the greater the sensitivity, but the larger and more expensive the vacuum pumps required to maintain the intermediate stages at the required pressure.
Increasing the gas flow into the mass spectrometer also increases the problems of contamination as more of the solvent and surrounding environment is admitted to the API interface. Many conventional mass spectrometers have direct line-of-sight through the system so that contamination that enters the API interface can end up in the analyzer and detector regions, degrading their performance and which is difficult and time consuming.
Methods and systems for mass spectrometry and more particularly to an interface providing charged particles to a mass spectrometer are described herein.
In some aspects, systems described herein include an Atmospheric Pressure Interface that is believed to provide the advantage of ensuring high sensitivity across a wide mass range whilst reducing the pumping requirements and amount of contamination entering the mass spectrometer analyzer.
In some examples, systems and methods described herein collect the charged particles in a turbulent region of the ion sampling region downstream from the capillary exit as opposed to collecting the charged particles in an initial quiet zone adjacent to the capillary or in a region exhibiting laminar flow.
In some examples, the extracting aperture is located opposite or nearly opposite the region in the flow path wherein the Mach disk or turbulent region is formed (e.g., at a position in the gas flow path where the ions encounter a Mach disk or turbulent flow region). As such, the ions are collected from a region in which the ions undergo turbulent flow. In this region the gas flow velocity is significantly reduced compared to the laminar flow region. It is believed that collecting ions (and in particular large mass bio-molecules) in this region is more efficient and can lessen the need for excessive extraction fields.
In some aspects, an atmospheric pressure ion source for providing ions to a mass spectrometer system includes a capillary having a first opening, a second opening, and passage extending from the first opening to the second opening, the first opening being in a first pressure region at about atmospheric pressure and the second opening being in the second pressure region at a partial vacuum of about 3 Torr or less, the capillary being positioned so that during operation of the mass spectrometry system ions enter the passage via the first opening and exit the passage via the second opening. The system also includes a vacuum chamber defining the second pressure region and having an inlet configured to receive ions from the second opening of the capillary, the vacuum chamber including an extracting aperture positioned so that during operation of the mass spectrometry system ions enter a third pressure region at about 10−2 Torr or less via the extracting aperture at a location of a turbulent region in the gas flow.
Embodiments can include one or more of the following.
The turbulent region can be a region exhibiting a Mach disk in the gas flow.
The extraction orifice can be located at a location determined based at least in part on a calculation of ⅔(P0/P1)1/2 where P0 and P1 are the pressures of the first and second pressure regions respectively.
The extracting aperture can be at a location subsequent to a quiet zone in the gas flow in the vacuum chamber.
The extracting aperture can be at a location subsequent to a quiet zone and at least one region of laminar flow in the gas flow in the vacuum chamber.
The vacuum chamber can be configured such that during operation of the mass spectrometry system alternating regions of laminar flow and turbulent flow are produced in the gas flow.
The member can be configured such that during operation of the mass spectrometry system alternating regions of laminar flow and turbulent flow are produced in the gas flow and the extracting aperture is at a location associated a first region of turbulent flow.
The capillary can have a diameter less than about 1 mm and length greater than 5 cm.
The source can further include a voltage source connected to the aperture configured to produce a substantially orthogonal extracting field perpendicular to the gas flow in the second pressure region.
The capillary can have a diameter of from about 300 μm to about 1000 μm and the vacuum chamber can have a diameter of from about 5 mm to about 20 mm.
The capillary can have a diameter of from about 50 μm to about 300 μm and the vacuum chamber can have a diameter of from about 2 mm to about 10 mm.
The capillary can have a diameter of from about 700 μm to about 2000 μm and the vacuum chamber can have a diameter of from about 15 mm to about 50 mm.
The system can also include a quadrupole mass analyzer positioned in the third vacuum region.
The capillary can be configured to form a region of laminar flow near the second opening of the capillary.
The system can also include a pump configured to form the partial vacuum in the second pressure region and the vacuum in the third pressure region.
The first opening of the capillary can be oriented in a direction that is 90 degrees from a direction of the extraction orifice.
The first opening of the capillary can be oriented in a direction that is the same as the direction of the extraction orifice but offset from the extraction orifice.
The system can also include an electrospray ion source configured to produce an electrospray near the first opening of the capillary.
The capillary can be a heated capillary.
The system can also include a pusher plate opposite the extraction orifice in the member.
As described in more detail below, during use, an ion source, in this case an electrospray ion source 12, generates a spray 14 of charged droplets and particles that includes the ions of interest at, or about, atmospheric pressure. Examples of atmospheric pressure ion sources may include Electrospray Ionization (ESI), Atmospheric Chemical Ionization (APCI), Atmospheric Pressure Photo Ionization (APPI), Matrix Assisted Laser Ionization, (MALDI), Direct Analysis in Real Time (DART) and Desorption Electrospray Ionization (DESI) and many others. The atmospheric pressure ion source may also include chip-based and microfabricated spraying devices.
The electrospray droplets from spray 14 enter into the ion entrance (such as an entrance to a heated capillary 50) of an API interface that directs the ions from the electrospray 14 through the capillary 50 to an outlet of the capillary 52 and into a vacuum chamber 56. The vacuum chamber 56 is held at a first intermediate vacuum between about 1 and about 10 Torr (e.g., from about 1 to about 8 Torr, from about 1 to about 5 Torr, from about 1 to about 3 Torr). As the droplets from the electrospray travel through the capillary 50, desolvation occurs such that ions emerge from an exit 52 of the capillary 50. A mixture a gas and charged particles travels through the first stage of the API interface (e.g., through the vacuum chamber 56) to the first pumping stage, as represented by arrow 62.
The vacuum chamber 56 includes an extraction orifice 54. An ion transfer region 60 is located on a side of the extraction orifice 54 opposite to the vacuum chamber 56 and an extraction lens 58 is provided near the extraction orifice 54 to assist in guiding particles/ions from the vacuum chamber 56 to the ion transfer region 60. Thus, as the mixture of gas and charged particles passes the extraction orifice 54 of the vacuum chamber 56 charged particles will be preferentially pulled into the ion transfer region 60 by an electric field generated by the extraction lens 58. Gas molecules will also be pulled through the extraction orifice 54 by the pressure differential that exists across it (e.g., the transfer region 60 is at a lower pressure than the vacuum chamber 56), but the gas entering the ion transfer region 60 will be significantly enriched in ions compared to the ratio of ions/molecules in first vacuum chamber 56. As explained in more detail herein, as the mixture of gas and ions travels along the flow path in the vacuum chamber 56, the mixture of gas and ions encounters both laminar flow regions and turbulent flow regions with the velocity of the gas being greater in the laminar flow regions than in the turbulent flow regions. The extraction orifice's location is determined and placed such that the extraction orifice is located in region where the gas flow and ions exhibits turbulent flow. The extraction orifice 54 can have a diameter from about 0.25 mm to about 3 mm (e.g., from about 0.25 mm to about 1 mm, from about 1 mm to about 2 mm, from about 2 mm to about 3 mm).
The ion transfer region 60 is typically operated in the RF-only mode and may be composed of a quadrupole, hexapole, octapole or similar ion optics device 28. In embodiments in which a hexapole device is used as the ion transfer region, the ions are constrained within the multipole field while the pressure of gas molecules is further reduced by the second pumping stage 68 to 10−2 to 10−4 Torr (e.g., from about 10−2 to about 10−3 Torr, from about 2×10−3 to about 8×10−3 Torr, about 5×10−3 Torr). The ions are guided through an aperture 76 into a mass analyzer region 72, in this instance equipped with a quadrupole analyzer 30 to separate the ions by mass to charge ratio and into a detector 32. The detector 32 amplifies the weak ion current signal of the sample based on the mass-to-charge ratio of the ions. The analyzer and detector regions 72 are pumped by a third pumping stage 70 to a pressure of 10−4 to 10−8 Torr (e.g., from about 10−4 to about 10−6 Torr, about 10−5 Torr).
As noted above, the system described herein relates to devices wherein charged particles are created at or near atmospheric pressure. Such a charged particle source may comprise an electrospray ion source or an atmospheric pressure chemical ionization source (APCI), or any other source of charged particle generator. Additionally, charged particles may also be generated by Direct Analysis in Real Time (DART), Desorption Electrospray Ionization (DESI), nano electrospray ionization (nanoESI) or from other forms of charged particles generated under similar conditions.
Such ions created at or near atmospheric pressure can be collected when the ions are formed within the close vicinity of a capillary inlet and where a pressure gradient is formed across such a capillary 50 by maintaining a substantially lower pressure on the second side of said capillary. For example, the secondary side of the aperture or capillary may be maintained at a pressure of ˜1 Torr by a vacuum pump with a pumping speed of greater than 10 m3/hr. At such a pumping speed the velocity of gas flow down a 1 mm diameter capillary is given by:
Pumping speed=gas flow velocity×cross sectional area of pipe×local density
As the gas drawn into the capillary 50, (
The pumping speed of a mechanical first stage pump is independent of pressure over a considerable range of pressures. A pumping speed of 10 m3/hr will give a gas velocity at ˜1 Torr which is supersonic. Such a flow along the inside of a smooth capillary 50 will be laminar at the low pressure end (e.g., near exit 52) because the viscous forces will be considerable when compared with the inertial forces.
As the gas exits the capillary 50 at the low pressure end 52 there is a discontinuity in the pressure gradient as the local, capillary exit pressure drops suddenly. As the pressure drops the gas molecules are cooled as the initial random velocity distribution is transferred to a uniform directed velocity and the gas temperature drops. The gas exiting the capillary has a supersonic velocity but is suddenly no longer bounded by the inside walls of the capillary. The gas molecules continue at high velocity for several millimeters at the exit of the capillary through a gas expansion zone 64 until they encounter a turbulent region known as the Mach disk 66. In this region the gas is no longer driven by the pressure gradient so the flow stalls and becomes turbulent as the local pressure rises.
Charged particles, present in trace quantities within the gas, are drawn along with the flow of gas. As the pressure drops along the capillary and the charged particles are drawn into the laminar region, two effects occur. First, frequent random collisions with, by now, cold gas molecules reduce the random velocity of the charged particles such that their temperature is reduced. Second, the charged particles of various masses, m, become imprinted with the flow velocity such that they attain a momentum my in the flow direction.
The transport of charged particles in this first stage of an atmospheric pressure ion source is thus intrinsically bound up with the transport of gas molecules. Charged particles may only be present within the transport gas at a concentration of 1 per million to 1 per thousand million (10−9) so collecting and analyzing ions directly from the transport gas in region 56 is highly inefficient. In order to increase the efficiency, it can be beneficial to separate the gas flow and the charged particle flow. The system shown in
Charged particles would be drawn toward this aperture 54 by the field 55 and would be attracted or directed into the aperture 54 and beyond into the ion transfer region 60. Such an extraction device separates the charged particle transport from the gas transport thus making possible the creation of a sensitive instrument without a massive pumping system by increasing the ratio of sample ions to gas molecules entering the ion transfer region 60. It is believed that the location of the extraction aperture 54 has a large effect on the functionality of the system as the efficiency will depend on the momentum of the ions passing the aperture 54. In the systems described herein, the extraction aperture 54 is located opposite or nearly opposite (e.g., in the wall of the vacuum chamber 56 at a location corresponding to a location where the gas flow inside the vacuum chamber 56 undergoes turbulent flow) the region wherein the Mach disk or turbulent region is formed (e.g., regions 84 and 88 shown in
More particularly, in
In some examples, the aperture to collect the ions can be placed within the ‘quiet zone’ of the expanding jet near the exit from the capillary 54 (e.g., region 80 in
When gas exits from a high pressure into a low pressure region, the gas undergoes many transformations in flow. First, the gas enters the ‘quiet zone’ just after the exit from the high pressure zone and expansion of the gas to fill a larger volume. In this region, the velocity of the gas can be high. The ‘quiet zone’ is followed by alternating regions of laminar flow and Mach disks or regions of turbulent flow (e.g., as shown schematically in
In gas flow, the Mach disk region (e.g., the region of turbulent flow) is characterized by a significant drop in the gas velocity. This may be as low as 300 m/s, similar to those speeds modeled in
The position of the Mach disk for an aperture between a high pressure region at a pressure P0 (in this case the pressure just before the end of the capillary 52) and a low pressure region at pressure P1 (in this case the first vacuum chamber 56) is given by an empirical expression:
X
M=⅔(P0/P1)1/2
where the dimensions of XM are ‘aperture diameters’ so that if XM=1 the Mach disk is formed a distance behind the aperture equal to the diameter of the aperture. For example, if P0 is atmospheric pressure (760 Torr) and P1 is 1 Torr then XM is 18.4 aperture dimensions; 18.4 mm for a 1 mm aperture.
Experiments measuring the sensitivity of extraction, e.g., the variation in ion signal (charged particles) as a function of position away from the capillary exit are described in relation to
Alternative geometries can be envisioned which would have similar gas dynamics but may further improve the ability to separate charged particles from gas molecules and especially droplets and solid particles. These may have advantages in further reducing contamination and in ease of mechanical arrangement and are depicted in
Other embodiments are in the claims.
This application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. §119(e) of U.S. Application Ser. No. 61/405,424, filed on Oct. 21, 2010, which is incorporated by referenced herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61405424 | Oct 2010 | US |