The present invention relates to a mass spectrometer system that includes an atmospheric pressure ionization interface suited for use in combination with a liquid chromatograph, i.e., as a liquid chromatograph mass spectrometer.
A mass spectrometer (hereinafter referred to as “MS”) is occasionally used in combination with a liquid chromatograph, as a liquid chromatograph mass spectrometer (hereinafter referred to as LC/MS). In an LC/MS, the components of a sample separated by liquid chromatography are introduced into the MS for mass spectrometry. In order to perform mass spectrometry, an interface is required to ionize the separated components. In recent years, a method of performing ionization under atmospheric pressure, such as an electrospray interface or an atmospheric pressure chemical ionization interface, has been generally employed as the interface for an LC/MS.
The mass spectrometer located downstream from such an interface is generally operated under a high vacuum condition. Accordingly, an LC/MS employing the atmospheric pressure ionization method usually comprises an atmospheric pressure ionization chamber for ionizing the liquid introduced from the liquid chromatograph unit under atmospheric pressure, and an intermediate evacuation chamber disposed between that and the mass spectrometry chamber with a built-in mass spectrometer. Evacuation systems are disposed in the intermediate evacuation chamber and the higher vacuum evacuation chamber downstream therefrom so that the degree of vacuum increases gradually from the upstream to the downstream chambers.
In the figure, reference numeral 1 denotes a liquid chromatograph unit, 20 denotes a mass spectrometry unit, and 10 denotes an interface unit that couples the two.
The liquid eluting from the liquid chromatograph unit 1 is atomized in the interface unit 10 and sprayed from a nozzle 14 into the atmospheric pressure ionization chamber 15 where the sample component molecules contained in the elution are ionized. The ions generated are led through a capillary tube 11 to a roughly evacuated intermediate evacuation chamber 21, where the ions are converged by a convergent lens 24, and sent to a higher vacuum second intermediate evacuation chamber 22, where they are converted into a beam by an ion lens 25.
The ions are then introduced into the mass spectrometry chamber 23, which is maintained under an even higher vacuum, and sent to a central space in a quadrupole filter 26 composed of four rod electrodes. A voltage, with an AC voltage superimposed on a DC voltage, is applied to the quadrupole filter 26. Only the ions having a specific mass number (more precisely, mass-to-charge ratio) that corresponds to the voltage pass through the quadrupole filter 26 and reach the ion detector 27. At the ion detector 27, the current in correspondence with the number of ions reached is taken out as an output signal.
The capillary tube 11 is disposed through the partition wall 16, which separates the atmospheric pressure ionization chamber 15 from the intermediate evacuation chamber 21, so that the atmospheric pressure ionization chamber 15 is in communication with the intermediate evacuation chamber 21 only through the capillary tube 11. Accordingly, a portion of the gas present in the atmospheric pressure ionization chamber 15 flows through the capillary tube 11 into the evacuated intermediate evacuation chamber 21.
The capillary tube 11 constitutes a desolvating unit 12 in conjunction with a heating block 12a fitted around the tube. The desolvating unit 12 functions as a means for removing solvent components contained in the charged particles generated in the atmospheric pressure ionization chamber 15. In other words, a portion of the charged particles sprayed from the nozzle 14 is caused to flow into the capillary tube 11 due to the pressure difference between the atmospheric pressure ionization chamber 15 and the intermediate evacuation chamber 21, and is heated by the heating block 12a, thereby promoting the desolvating process as the particles are introduced into the intermediate evacuation chamber 21.
Non-volatile components of the samples analyzed or inorganic salts from the liquid mobile phases used can accumulate inside the capillary tube 11. Thus, the capillary tube requires periodic maintenance that entails removal for cleaning or replacement. In order to reduce the down time for carrying out such maintenance, there has been made available a system, which includes an isolation gate 13 disposed on the partition wall 16, as indicated by the broken line in
Reference numeral 35 denotes a cover that prevents contamination from the particles being sprayed in the atmospheric pressure ionization chamber 15.
Such an isolation gate 13, as one example thereof is shown in
The present invention has been developed in view of the aforementioned problems. It is an object of this invention to provide an atmospheric pressure ionization MS with improved maintainability and utilization by omitting the isolation gate, and to improve the construction so as to enable the installation and removal of the capillary tube without breaching the vacuum.
Further objects and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description of the invention and the associated drawings.
In order to achieve the above object, in accordance with the atmospheric pressure ionization MS of the present invention, the partition wall that separates the atmospheric pressure ionization chamber from the intermediate evacuation chamber is provided with a small orifice having a diameter corresponding to the inner diameter of the capillary tube. The capillary tube is detachably installed on the partition wall so that the rear end thereof abuts on the small orifice, and the internal channel of the capillary tube is in communication with the small orifice. Such a construction allows the atmospheric pressure ionization chamber to remain in communication with the intermediate evacuation chamber through the small orifice even when the capillary tube is removed. Thus, the required vacuum can be maintained in the downstream chamber without significantly increasing the load applied to the vacuum pump located therein.
The present invention is simple in construction and effective in saving space. It is, therefore, not prone to problems and does not present an obstacle to placement of the convergent lens.
In addition to its extremely simple construction, the present invention allows for the removal of the desolvating unit without breaching the vacuum, and thus can provide an atmospheric pressure ionization MS with excellent maintainability and a high rate of utilization.
In
When the capillary tube 11 is removed for maintenance, the atmospheric pressure ionization chamber 15 and the intermediate evacuation chamber 21 are in communication only through the small orifice 17. The channel resistance of the small orifice 17 alone does not differ significantly from the situation in which the capillary tube 11 is attached. Thus, the increase in the load applied to the oil rotary pump (not shown) that evacuates the intermediate evacuation chamber 21 would be minimal, and a required vacuum can be maintained in the intermediate evacuation chamber 21.
The embodiment of the invention shown in
In
The projection 18a may be a male taper to be mated with the female taper of the small orifice 17, as in the case of
Moreover, although not specifically shown in the figures, interposing a packing material, such as an O-ring, between the aforementioned desolvating unit 12 and the partition wall 16 at the time of installation to ensure air-tightness should naturally be considered as a matter of design variation.
In the embodiments described above, the small orifice 17 is formed directly in the partition wall 16. In another possible embodiment of the invention, for design purposes, a plate having the small orifice 17 with the desolvating unit 12 installed thereto may be attached to the partition wall 16. In such an embodiment, the plate can be perceived as being one part of the partition wall 16, and thus the construction falls within the scope of the present invention.
The MS according to the present invention can be utilized not only as an LC/MS, but also potentially, for example, as an ICP/MS in combination with the ICP (inductively coupled plasma) emission spectrometry method.
The above-described embodiments are but several examples of the system according to the present invention. The description is illustrative, and the scope of the invention, including modifications, revisions, and additions thereto, is limited only by the appended claims.
The disclosure of Japanese Patent Application No. 2004-361071 filed on Dec. 14, 2004, is incorporated herein.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2004-361071 | Dec 2004 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6501073 | Mylchreest et al. | Dec 2002 | B1 |
7145136 | Yang et al. | Dec 2006 | B2 |
20060054805 | Flanagan et al. | Mar 2006 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060124849 A1 | Jun 2006 | US |