The present invention relates to a device for determining the mass of a particle in suspension or in solution in a fluid.
It applies in particular to mass spectrometry for species which are neutral or ionized.
Conventional mass spectrometry (MS) is a universal chemical or biological analytical tool that is based on four essential components: an injection system, an ionization source, a mass analyser and an ion detector. These components are arranged in an enclosure, provided with pumps to create a vacuum therein.
The result of a mass spectrometry measurement is a spectrum that reflects the abundance, in a mixture, of a type of species as a function of the mass/charge ratio of said species. Each peak of the spectrum is the signature of a mono-charged or multi-charged ion; and the identification of species is achieved by means of a pre-established data bank.
The technique that has been described has now become a standard for numerous applications. However, it has a certain number of drawbacks:
This latter drawback results mainly from the difficulty of accelerating sufficiently a heavy particle, and thus to give it sufficient energy so that it can reach the ion detector. It is however vital to be able to measure particles whose masses are greater than 100 kDa (1.66×10−22 kg), since they can have fundamental importance in the biomedical field: they may be for example viruses, bacteria, organelles, protein complexes or cells.
Another technique has been proposed for detecting masses using NEMS, in other words nano-electro-mechanical systems. And NEMS based resonant devices have been elaborated for which the detection limits are 1012 times lower than those of QCM, in other words quartz crystal microbalances, which are commercially available. In this respect, reference may be made to the following documents:
The principle of such a NEMS based resonating device is explained hereafter.
A particle of mass mp settles on the NEMS, of stiffness k and of effective mass m, which increases its total mass. The new resonance frequency of the device is then equal to:
The frequency response peaks (in open loop), before and after deposition of the mass mp, are thus shifted by a quantity Δf, which is little different to
When the device is used in closed loop, its resonance frequency can thus be monitored in real time using electrical transduction means and loop closure means.
Thus, during its adsorption on a resonating NEMS, an individual particle of analyte, or a group of such particles, makes the resonance frequency of the NEMS drop sharply. And the mass of the particle, or the group of particles, may be deduced from the measurement of the frequency jump Δf.
Said frequency jump Δf depends on the mass of the particle, or the group of particles (see the value of Δf given above). But it also depends on the position at which the particle or the group of particles has settled on the surface of the NEMS. When it is not possible—and this is the most common case—to precisely locate the adsorption position of the particles on the NEMS, the frequency jump information alone is not sufficient. Recourse may then be made to a statistical approach, which consists:
In this respect, reference may be made to the following document:
Another solution consists in measuring in real time the frequencies of two modes, or more, of the same NEMS. Several items of information are thereby available. In this respect, reference may be made to the following document:
This mass measurement by means of NEMS has led to using them for performing mass spectrometry, which is then known as N EMS-MS. In this technique, the distribution of the masses of all the particles that are present in a mixture is measured and, to do so, they are sent one after the other onto the surface of a NEMS. This enables biological mass spectrometry, at the level of the individual particle, and procures the following advantages:
To do so, commercially available components are used: the injection source uses an ESI, in other words electrospray ionization, which nebulizes and ionizes the species to be analysed. The latter pass through several differential pumping and ionic guidance stages (using hexapoles), to finally arrive in the NEMS zone.
Such a known system has various drawbacks which do not enable the optimal use of all of the advantages brought by the NEMS-MS technique:
All of these drawbacks make this known system very inefficient and do not make it possible to fully benefit from the advantages of NEMS-MS. In particular, the potential advantage that there would be in using a system dedicated to neutral and/or equally well ionized species may be seen. In fact, transmission by ion optics (and thus by means of electromagnetic fields) of generally heavy species, of the kind of those that are particularly targeted by NEMS-MS (organelles, viruses, bacteria, protein complexes, etc.), is very difficult. To transmit these massive particles with correct efficiency, it would be necessary to render them highly charged, which would have the effect of denaturing them and would no longer make it possible to measure them in their native state.
Resonating devices using NEMS are also known through the following documents:
WO 2012/034949, invention of S. Hentz
WO 2012/034951, invention of S. Hentz et al.
WO 2012/034990, invention of S. Hentz.
The aim of the present invention is to overcome the drawbacks of the known NEMS-MS system, described above, by associating a device for injecting neutral and/or ionized species, a guidance device, and a NEMS type detector, the whole favouring the proximity of these various components.
In a precise manner, the subject matter of the present invention is a device for determining the mass of at least one particle in suspension or in solution in a fluid, characterised in that it comprises:
The device, the subject matter of the invention, thus makes it possible to determine the mass of each particle, in suspension or in solution, or a set of particles, depending on the flow rate of the flux used and the type of analyte containing the particles to be analysed. Obviously, “particle” is taken to mean an individual particle or an aggregate of particles.
According to a particular embodiment of the device, the subject matter of the invention, the second device is electrically neutral.
Such an electrically neutral device has the advantage of transmitting equally well positive ions and negative ions as well as neutral particles.
The second device may comprise an aerodynamic lens.
Said aerodynamic lens may be associated, at the outlet, with an orifice.
Preferably, the device, the subject matter of the invention, further comprises:
“Given pressure” is taken to mean a pressure that may be an air pressure (atmospheric pressure) or a pressure of another gas, depending on the envisaged application for the invention.
Then, the second device may further comprise a capillary having an inlet orifice in the zone and an output orifice in the first enclosure, to place the zone in communication with the first enclosure.
In this case, the second device may comprise an aerodynamic lens opposite the inlet and/or outlet orifice of the capillary.
Thus, the concentration or focusing of the flux can take place equally well at the inlet and/or at the outlet of the capillary.
According to a particular embodiment, the device, the subject matter of the invention, further comprises another vacuum enclosure, or second enclosure, provided to be at a second pressure, which may be below the first pressure, said second enclosure containing the third device and communicating with the first enclosure via a first orifice opposite the gravimetric detector.
The gravimetric detector may be selected from nano-electromechanical systems, micro-electromechanical systems, quartz crystal microbalances, SAW (surface acoustic wave) resonators, BAW (bulk acoustic wave) resonators and impact detectors.
The first device may be selected from ultrasonic nebulizers, microwave induced nebulization devices, microcapillary array nebulizers and surface acoustic wave nebulizers.
The present invention will be better understood on reading the description of embodiment examples given hereafter, purely as an indication and in no way limiting, and by referring to the appended drawings in which:
As may be seen, the device represented in
The device for the guidance and the aerodynamic focusing of the flux also comprises a capillary (rectilinear) 22 having an inlet orifice 24 in the zone 16 and an output orifice 26 in the enclosure 18, to place the zone 6 in communication with said enclosure 18. The inlet of the device for the guidance and the aerodynamic focusing of the flux is constituted of the inlet orifice 24 of the capillary 22 and the outlet of said device for the guidance and the aerodynamic focusing of the flux is constituted of the outlet 10 of the aerodynamic focusing lens 6.
It is pointed out that the capillary 22 also makes it possible to desolvate the particles in suspension or in solution.
The device represented in
The enclosure 28 contains the device 12 and communicates with the enclosure 18 via an orifice 32 opposite the detector 14.
Said detector 14 is mounted on a micro-positioning wafer 34, itself mounted on a sealed feed-through 36, as may be seen in
The capillary 22 is aligned with said orifice 32, and the device 6 is comprised between the orifice 32 and the output orifice 26 of the capillary 22.
Thus, in the example of
The example of the invention, represented in
In the example of
The means of reading and controlling the detector 14 are not represented. Said detector 14 may be temperature controlled, or not. The same is true of the inlet capillary 22.
It is advantageous to use a NEMS for the detection; but any other gravimetric detector (MEMS, QCM, SAW, BAW) may be used or, more generally, an inertial force detector, in particular an impact detector. With regard to the latter, reference may be made to the following document:
The aerodynamic focusing lens 6 is more simply known as “aerodynamic lens”. It is known that the latter is in fact composed of a series of elementary aerodynamic lenses. Examples of aerodynamic lenses are given hereafter.
In the invention, the use of such lenses makes it possible to guide in particular neutral species in order to maximise measurement efficiency. Thus, an electrostatic guidance of the kind of that employed in ion optics is not used.
It is recalled that an aerodynamic lens comprises a series of orifices that constitute elementary aerodynamic lenses. Said orifices may have identical sizes (see
Aerodynamic lenses are commonly used in mass spectrometers intended to measure particles present in aerosols but, in the latter case, said lenses are not used for the guidance and the focusing of particles to a detector since the species are always ionized following their introduction in a mass spectrometer: they are used for the concentration and the sorting of species to be measured, before their passage in the spectrometer.
In an elaborated form, a focusing device that can be used in the invention comprises (see
In this respect, reference may be made to the following document:
It is pointed out that only a part of the components of the device of
The aerodynamic lens 40 (respectively 43) of
In the invention, any type of nebulization device may be used, particularly an ultrasonic nebulizer, a microwave induced nebulization device or a microcapillary array nebulizer.
Advantageously, a SAWN is used, in other words a surface acoustic wave nebulizer. In this respect, reference may be made to the following document:
It involves, in this case, using a surface acoustic wave resonator, on which a drop of liquid containing the analytes is deposited. The surface acoustic wave produced by the resonator dissipates its energy in the liquid which, then, is nebulized.
This nebulization method has the interest of only ionizing a very small part of the analytes, also with a very low ionization energy. In addition, it is capable of desorbing entire drops of water, as well as biological particles in a wide range of masses. In addition, such a nebulization device is integrable. It may be obtained by collective micro-manufacturing methods. And, it may be envisaged to integrate the entire architecture of the present invention when such an integrable device is used.
In the examples of the invention given above, the guidance and focusing device is electrically neutral. This signifies that no electromagnetic field is applied to said device or produced by it.
For the guidance and the focusing, preferably such an electrically neutral device is used. Nevertheless, a guidance and focusing device that is not electrically neutral could also be used, more precisely in which the lateral face is polarised with a certain voltage in order to separate the neutral species from the ionized species or, conversely, to polarise the device so as to obtain an electromagnetic field capable of focusing only the neutral species.
In the example of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
13 52154 | Mar 2013 | FR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
6722200 | Roukes et al. | Apr 2004 | B2 |
6906322 | Berggren | Jun 2005 | B2 |
6972408 | Reilly | Dec 2005 | B1 |
7479630 | Bandura | Jan 2009 | B2 |
7642511 | Reilly | Jan 2010 | B2 |
8539840 | Ariessohn | Sep 2013 | B2 |
8963076 | Jong | Feb 2015 | B2 |
20080022853 | Ariessohn | Jan 2008 | A1 |
20110186167 | Lee et al. | Aug 2011 | A1 |
20120199736 | Danel et al. | Aug 2012 | A1 |
20130154440 | Hentz | Jun 2013 | A1 |
20130160550 | Hentz | Jun 2013 | A1 |
20130214644 | Hentz et al. | Aug 2013 | A1 |
20150231340 | Pumphrey | Aug 2015 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2 979 705 | Mar 2013 | FR |
WO 2011060369 | May 2011 | WO |
WO 2012034949 | Mar 2012 | WO |
WO 2012034951 | Mar 2012 | WO |
WO 2012034990 | Mar 2012 | WO |
Entry |
---|
K. L. Ekinci, et al., “Ultrasensitive nanoelectromechanical mass detection” Applied Physics Letters, vol. 84, No. 22, May 31, 2004, pp. 4469-4471. |
S. Dohn, et al., “Mass and position determination of attached particles on cantilever based mass sensors” Review of Scientific Instruments, vol. 78, No. 103303, 2007, 3 Pages. |
Jonghoo Park, et al., “A Mechanical Nanomembrane Detector for Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometry” Nano Letters, vol. 11, 2011, pp. 3681-3684. |
“ARI Aerosol Mass Spectrometer”, Operation Manual, Aerodyne Research, Inc. Nov. 17, 2005, 23 Pages. |
French Preliminary Search Report issued Nov. 7, 2013, in Patent Application No. FR 1352154, filed Mar. 11, 2013 (with English Translation of Category of Cited Documents). |
A. K. Naik, et al., “Towards single-molecule nanomechanical mass spectrometry”, Nature Nanotechnology, vol. 4, No. 7, XP 055024639, Jun. 21, 2009, pp. 445-450. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20140250980 A1 | Sep 2014 | US |