Claims
- 1. A charged particle source for preparing gas phase ions, secondary electrically charged droplets of a selected size or both from a liquid sample, containing chemical species in a solvent, carrier liquid or both, said source comprising:
a) an electrically charged droplet source for generating a primary electrically charged droplet of the liquid sample in a flow of bath gas, wherein said primary electrically charged droplet has a selected droplet exit time and a momentum substantially directed along a droplet production axis; b) a charged droplet trap in fluid communication with the electrically charged droplet source and positioned along said droplet production axis at a selected distance downstream from said electrically charged droplet source, with respect to the flow of bath gas, for receiving the flow of bath gas and primary electrically charged droplet; wherein the primary electrically charged droplet remains in the charged droplet trap for a selected residence time sufficient to provide at least partial evaporation of solvent, carrier liquid or both from the primary electrically charged droplet generating at least one gas phase ion, at least one secondary electrically charged droplet of a selected size or a combination of at least one gas phase ion and at least one secondary electrically charged droplet of a selected size; wherein the gas phase ions, secondary electrically charged droplets of a selected size or both exit the trap along an ion production axis at a selected release time; and c) at least one flow inlet in fluid communication with said charged droplet source for introducing a flow of bath gas.
- 2. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein the gas phase ions, secondary electrically charged droplets of a selected size or both have a momentum substantially directed along the ion production axis.
- 3. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein the gas phase ions, secondary electrically charged droplets of a selected size or both have a substantially uniform trajectory along the ion production axis.
- 4. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein the temperature in the charged droplet trap is selectably adjustable.
- 5. The charged particle source of claim 1 comprising a flow rate controller which is capable of adjusting the flow rate of bath gas through the charged droplet trap.
- 6. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein the temperature of the charged droplet trap, the flow rate of bath gas through the charged droplet trap, the charge state of the primary electrically charged droplet or any combination thereof is adjusted to control the rate of evaporation of solvent, carrier liquid or both from the primary electrically charged droplets.
- 7. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein the charged droplet trap is selected from the group consisting of:
an electrostatic droplet trap; an electrodynamic droplet trap; a magnetic droplet trap; an optical droplet trap; and an acoustical droplet trap.
- 8. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein the charged droplet trap comprises a cubic trap.
- 9. The charged particle source of claim 8 wherein the cubic trap comprises a first pair of opposed planar electrodes, a second pair of opposed planar electrodes and a third pair of opposed planar electrodes, wherein said first pair of opposed planar electrodes, said second pair of opposed planar electrodes and said third pair of opposed planar electrodes are arranged in a cubic orientation.
- 10. The charged particle source of claim 9 wherein the first pair of opposed planar electrodes are in contact with an ac voltage which is 120° out of phase with the second pair of opposed planar electrodes and the third pair of opposed planar electrodes and wherein the second pair of opposed planar electrodes are in contact with an ac voltage which is 120° out of phase with the first pair of opposed planar electrodes and the third pair of opposed planar electrodes.
- 11. The charged particle source of claim 9 wherein the first pair of opposed planar electrodes is in contact with an ac voltage that is 60° out of phase with the second pair of opposed electrodes and the third pair of opposed planar electrode is held substantially near ground.
- 12. The charged particle source of claim 9 wherein a dc potential is simultaneously applied to the planar electrodes to allow generation of a balance force between the plates.
- 13. The charged particle source of claim 9 wherein the planar electrodes comprise gold vapor deposited on glass.
- 14. The charged particle source of claim 9 wherein at least one planar electrode has a central orifice.
- 15. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein the charged droplet trap has an inlet aperture and an exit aperture.
- 16. The charged particle source of claim 1 comprising a charge reduction region, of selected length, having a shielded reagent ion source which generates electrons, reagent ions or both from said bath gas, cooperatively connected to the electrically charged droplet source and positioned a selected distance downstream with respect to the flow of bath gas from said droplet source for receiving the flow of bath gas, electrically charged droplets, gas phase ions or any combinations of these, wherein at least partial evaporation of solvent, carrier liquid or both from the electrically charged droplets generates gas phase ions, wherein the electrons, reagent ions or both react with the electrically charged droplets, gas phase ions or both to reduce the charge state distribution of the gas phase ions and generate gas phase ions with a selected charge state distribution.
- 17. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein a single gas phase ion is generated from the primary electrically charged droplet.
- 18. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein a plurality of gas phase ions is generated from the primary electrically charged droplet.
- 19. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein the primary electrically charged droplet contains a single chemical species.
- 20. The charged particle source of claim 1 comprising an ion funnel operationally connected to said charged droplet trap.
- 21. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein the secondary electrically charged droplets of selected size, gas phase ions or both have a substantially uniform velocity.
- 22. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein the droplet production axis is coaxial with the ion production axis.
- 23. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein the output of the charged droplet trap substantially comprises gas phase ions.
- 24. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein the output of the charged droplet trap substantially comprises secondary electrically charged droplets of selected size.
- 25. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein the primary electrically charged droplet, secondary electrically charged droplets and gas phase ions are positively charged.
- 26. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein the primary electrically charged droplet, secondary electrically charged droplets and gas phase ions are negatively charged.
- 27. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein the primary electrically charged droplet has a volume of 10 picoliters per mole and the concentration of said chemical species in said liquid sample is less than or equal to about 20 picomoles per liter.
- 28. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein the electrically charged droplet source is a piezoelectric droplet source.
- 29. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein the electrically charged droplet source comprises;
a) a piezoelectric element with an axial bore, positioned along the droplet production axis, having an internal end and an external end, wherein said piezoelectric element is capable of generating a pulsed pressure wave within the axial bore upon application of a pulsed electric potential to the piezoelectric element; b) a dispenser element positioned within the axial bore of said piezoelectric element, wherein the dispenser element extends a selected distance past the external end of the axial bore and terminates at a dispensing end with a small aperture opening, wherein the dispenser element extends a selected distance past the internal end of the axial bore and terminates at an inlet end for introducing liquid sample and wherein said pulsed pressure wave is conveyed through said dispenser element and generates primary electrically charged droplets of the liquid sample that exit the dispensing end at a selected droplet exit time; c) an electrode in contact with said liquid sample which is capable of holding said liquid sample at a selected electric potential; d) a shield element positioned between said electrode and said piezoelectric element for substantially preventing the electric field, electromagnetic field or both generated from said electrode from interacting with said piezoelectric element; and e) a piezoelectric controller operationally connected to said piezoelectric element capable of adjusting the onset time, frequency, amplitude, rise time, fall time and duration of the pulsed electric potential applied to the piezoelectric element which selects the onset time, frequency, amplitude, rise time, fall time and duration of the pulsed pressure wave within the axial bore.
- 30. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein said chemical species are biopolymers.
- 31. The charged particle source of claim 1 wherein said chemical species are selected from the group consisting of:
one or more oligopeptides; one or more oligonucleotides; one or more lipids; one or more glycoproteins; one or more polysaccharides; and one or more carbohydrates.
- 32. The charged particle source of claim 1 comprising an online liquid phase separation device operationally connected to said electrically charged droplet source to provide sample purification, separation or both prior to formation of said primary electrically charged droplets.
- 33. The charged particle source of claim 32 wherein said online liquid phase separation device is selected from the group consisting of:
a high performance liquid chromatography device; a capillary electrophoresis device; a microfiltration device; a flow sorting device; a liquid phase chromatography device; and a super critical fluid chromatography device.
- 34. The charged particle source of claim 1 comprising:
a) a light source for illuminating the primary electrically charged droplet held in the charged droplet trap; and b) a scattered light detector positioned at a selected scattered light angle for detecting light scattered by said primary electrically charged droplet held in the charged droplet trap; wherein monitoring the intensity of light scattered from said primary electrically charged droplet provides measurement the size of the primary electrically charged droplet, the rate of evaporation of solvent, carrier liquid or both from the primary electrically charged droplet, or both.
- 35. A charged particle source for preparing charged particles from a liquid sample, said device comprising a primary electrically charged droplet of the liquid sample held in a charged droplet trap, wherein the primary electrically charged droplet remains within the charged droplet trap for a selected residence time sufficient to provide at least partial evaporation of solvent, carrier liquid or both from the primary electrically charged droplet generating at least one gas phase ion, at least one secondary electrically charged droplet of a selected size or a combination of at least one gas phase ion and at least one secondary electrically charged droplet of a selected size that exit the trap along an ion production axis at a selected release time.
- 36. A charged particle source for preparing gas phase ions, secondary electrically charged droplets of a selected size or both from a liquid sample, containing chemical species in a solvent, carrier liquid or both, said source comprising:
a) an electrically charged droplet source for generating a primary electrically charged droplet of the liquid sample in a flow of bath gas, wherein said primary electrically charged droplet has a selected droplet exit time and a momentum substantially directed along a droplet production axis; b) a charged droplet trap in fluid communication with the electrically charged droplet source and positioned along said droplet production axis at a selected distance downstream from said electrically charged droplet source, with respect to the flow of bath gas, for receiving the flow of bath gas and primary electrically charged droplet; wherein the primary electrically charged droplet remains in the charged droplet trap for a selected residence time sufficient to provide at least partial evaporation of solvent, carrier liquid or both from the electrically charged droplet generating at least one gas phase ion, at least one secondary electrically charged droplet of a selected size or a combination of at least one gas phase ion and at least one secondary electrically charged droplet of a selected size; wherein the gas phase ions, secondary electrically charged droplets of a selected size or both exit the trap along an ion production axis at a selected release time; c) an aerodynamic ion lens system of selected length having an ion optical axis, an internal end and an external end, in fluid communication with the electrically charged droplet source and positioned at a selected distance downstream from the droplet trap, with respect to the flow of bath gas, for receiving the flow of bath gas, secondary electrically charged droplets of a selected size, gas phase ions or any combinations thereof, wherein the optical axis of the lens system is coaxial with the ion production axis, wherein the secondary electrically charged droplets of a selected size, gas phase ions or both enter the internal end and at least partial evaporation of solvent, carrier liquid or both from the secondary electrically charged droplets of a selected size in the aerodynamic ion lens system generate at least one gas phase ion, wherein the flow of bath gas through the lens system focuses the spatial distribution of the secondary electrically charged droplets of a selected size, gas phase ions or both about the ion production axis and wherein the secondary electrically charged droplets, gas phase ions or both exit said external end of the aerodynamic ion lens system along said ion production axis; and d) at least one flow inlet, in fluid communication with said charged droplet source for introducing the flow of bath gas.
- 37. The ion source of claim 36 wherein gas phase ions are generated in the aerodynamic ion lens system.
- 38. The ion source of claim 36 wherein the droplet production axis is orthogonal to the ion production axis.
- 39. The ion source of claim 36 wherein the droplet production axis is coaxial with the ion production axis.
- 40. An ion source for preparing gas phase ions from a liquid sample, containing chemical species in a solvent, carrier liquid or both, wherein the ions generated have a momentum substantially directed along an ion production axis, said source comprising:
a) an electrically charged droplet source for generating primary electrically charged droplets of the liquid sample in a flow of bath gas, wherein said primary electrically charged droplets have a selected droplet exit time and a momentum directed along a droplet production axis; b) an aerodynamic ion lens system of selected length having an ion optical axis, an internal end and an external end, in fluid communication with the electrically charged droplet source and positioned at a selected distance downstream from the electrically charged droplet source with respect to the flow of bath gas, for receiving the flow of bath gas and the primary electrically charged droplets, wherein the optical axis of the lens system is coaxial with the ion production axis, wherein the primary electrically charged droplets enter the internal end and at least partial evaporation of solvent, carrier liquid or both from the primary electrically charged droplets in the aerodynamic ion lens system generates at least one gas phase ion, secondary electrically charged droplets or both wherein the flow of bath gas through the lens system focuses the spatial distribution of the primary electrically charged droplets, secondary electrically charged droplets, gas phase ions or any combinations of these about the ion production axis and wherein the secondary electrically charged droplets, gas phase ions or both exit said external end of the aerodynamic ion lens system having a momentum substantially directed along the ion production axis; and c) at least one flow inlet, in fluid communication with said charged droplet source for introducing the flow of bath gas, wherein said flow of bath gas conducts said primary electrically charged droplets, secondary electrically charged droplets and gas phase ions through said aerodynamic ion lens system.
- 41. The ion source of claim 40 wherein the aerodynamic ion lens system comprises a plurality of apertures positioned at selected distances from the electrically charged droplet source along the ion production axis, wherein each aperture is concentrically positioned about the ion production axis.
- 42. The ion source of claim 41 wherein the apertures are substantially circular.
- 43. The ion source of claim 42 wherein the diameters of the plurality of apertures decrease sequentially from the internal end to the external end.
- 44. The ion source of claim 41 wherein the spacing between apertures is selectively adjustable.
- 45. The ion source of claim 41 wherein the spacing between apertures ranges from about 10 millimeter to about 100 millimeters.
- 46. The ion source of claim 42 wherein the aperture diameters range from about 1.0 millimeter to about 10 millimeters.
- 47. The ion source of claim 41 wherein the aperture width ranges from about 0.1 millimeter to 10 millimeters.
- 48. The ion source of claim 40 wherein the aerodynamic ion lens system comprises a thin plate orifice nozzle operationally connected to said external end.
- 49. The ion source of claim 40 wherein the aerodynamic ion lens system is substantially free of electric fields, electromagnetic fields or both generated by sources other than the electrically charged droplets and the gas phase ions.
- 50. The ion source of claim 40 wherein the flow of bath gas through said aerodynamic ion lens system is a laminar flow.
- 51. The ion source of claim 40 wherein the flow velocity of gas through the aerodynamic lens system ranges from about 100 m/sec. to about 500 m/sec.
- 52. The ion source of claim 40 wherein the aerodynamic lens system is differentially pumped.
- 53. The ion source of claim 52 wherein the pressure in the aerodynamic ion lens system ranges from about 5 Torr to about 0.01 Torr.
- 54. The ion source of claim 40 wherein the droplet production axis is coaxial with the ion production axis.
- 55. The ion source of claim 40 comprising a charge reduction region, of selected length, having a shielded reagent ion source which generates electrons, reagent ions or both from said bath gas, cooperatively connected to the electrically charged droplet source and positioned a selected distance downstream with respect to the flow of bath gas from said droplet source for receiving the flow of bath gas, electrically charged droplets, gas phase ions or any combinations of these, wherein at least partial evaporation of solvent, carrier liquid or both from the electrically charged droplets generates gas phase ions, wherein the electrons, reagent ions or both react with the electrically charged droplets, gas phase ions or both to reduce the charge state distribution of the gas phase ions and generate gas phase ions with a selected charge state distribution.
- 56. The ion source of claim 40 wherein the electrically charged droplet source comprises;
a) a piezoelectric element with an axial bore, positioned along the droplet production axis, having an internal end and an external end, wherein said piezoelectric element is capable of generating a pulsed pressure wave within the axial bore upon application of a pulsed electric potential to the piezoelectric element; b) a dispenser element positioned within the axial bore of said piezoelectric element, wherein the dispenser element extends a selected distance past the external end of the axial bore and terminates at a dispensing end with a small aperture opening, wherein the dispenser element extends a selected distance past the internal end of the axial bore and terminates at an inlet end for introducing liquid sample and wherein said pulsed pressure wave is conveyed through said dispenser element and generates electrically charged droplets of the liquid sample that exit the dispensing end at a selected droplet exit time; c) an electrode in contact with said liquid sample which is capable of holding said liquid sample at a selected electric potential; d) a shield element positioned between said electrode and said piezoelectric element for substantially preventing the electric field, electromagnetic field or both generated from said electrode from interacting with said piezoelectric element; and e) a piezoelectric controller operationally connected to said piezoelectric element capable of adjusting the onset time, frequency, amplitude, rise time, fall time and duration of the pulsed electric potential applied to the piezoelectric element which selects the onset time, frequency, amplitude, rise time, fall time and duration of the pulsed pressure wave within the axial bore.
- 57. The ion source of claim 40 wherein the primary electrically charged droplets ions have substantially similar velocities.
- 58. The ion source of claim 40 wherein the primary electrically charged droplets and gas phase ions are positively charged.
- 59. The ion source of claim 40 wherein the primary electrically charged droplets and gas phase ions are negatively charged.
- 60. The ion source of claim 40 wherein the aerodynamic ion lens system comprises a flow rate controller operationally connected to said internal end to regulate the flow rate of bath gas, primary electrically charged droplets, secondary electrically charged droplet and gas phase ions through the aerodynamic ion lens system.
- 61. The ion source of claim 60 wherein the flow rate controller comprises a bleeder valve.
- 62. The ion source of claim 40 wherein the aerodynamic ion lens system comprises thin-plate-orifice nozzle operationally connected to said external end.
- 63. The ion source of claim 48 wherein the thin-plate-orifice nozzle comprises a cylindrical opening, about 6 mm in diameter and about 10 mm long, and a thin plate aperture about 3 mm in diameter.
- 64. The ion source of claim 40 wherein the charged droplet source is selected from the group consisting of:
a positive pressure electrospray source; a pneumatic nebulizer; a piezoelectric pneumatic nebulizer; an atomizer; a piezoelectric dispenser; a nanospray source; a pulsed nanospray source; an ultrasonic nebulizer; and a cylindrical capacitor electrospray source.
- 65. The ion source of claim 40 wherein said chemical species are biopolymers.
- 66. The ion source of claim 40 wherein said chemical species are selected from the group consisting of:
one or more oligopeptides; one or more oligonucleotides; one or more lipids; one or more glycoproteins; one or more polysaccharides; and one or more carbohydrates.
- 67. The ion source of claim 40 comprising an online liquid phase separation device operationally connected to said electrically charged droplet source to provide sample purification, separation or both prior to formation of said primary electrically charged droplets.
- 68. The ion source of claim 67 wherein said online liquid phase separation device is selected from the group consisting of:
a high performance liquid chromatography device; a capillary electrophoresis device; a microfiltration device; a flow sorting device; a liquid phase chromatography device; and a super critical fluid chromatography device.
- 69. A device for determining the identity, concentration or both of chemical species in a liquid sample containing the chemical species in a solvent, carrier liquid or both, said device comprising:
a) an electrically charged droplet source for generating primary electrically charged droplets of the liquid sample in a flow of bath gas, wherein said primary electrically charged droplets have a selected droplet exit time and a momentum directed along a droplet production axis; b) an aerodynamic ion lens system of selected length having an ion optical axis, an internal end and an external end, in fluid communication with the electrically charged droplet source and positioned at a selected distance downstream from the electrically charged droplet source with respect to the flow of bath gas, for receiving the flow of bath gas and the primary electrically charged droplets, wherein the optical axis of the lens system is coaxial with the ion production axis, wherein the primary electrically charged droplets enter the internal end and at least partial evaporation of solvent, carrier liquid or both from the primary electrically charged droplets in the aerodynamic ion lens system generates gas phase ions, secondary electrically charged droplets or both wherein the flow of bath gas through the lens system focuses the spatial distribution of the primary electrically charged droplets, secondary electrically charged droplets, gas phase ions or any combinations of these about the ion production axis and wherein the secondary electrically charged droplets, gas phase ions or both exit said external end of the aerodynamic ion lens system having a momentum substantially directed along the ion production axis; c) at least one flow inlet, in fluid communication with said charged droplet source for introducing the flow of bath gas, wherein said flow of bath gas conducts said primary electrically charged droplets, secondary electrically charged droplets and gas phase ions through said aerodynamic ion lens system, and d) a charged particle analyzer operationally connected to said aerodynamic ion lens system, for analyzing said gas phase ions.
- 70. The device of claim 69 wherein the charged particle analyzer comprises a mass analyzer operationally connected to the aerodynamic ion lens system to provide efficient introduction of said gas phase ions into said mass analyzer.
- 71. The device of claim 70 wherein said mass analyzer comprises a time-of-flight mass analyzer positioned along said ion production axis.
- 72. The device of claim 71 wherein said time-of-flight mass analyzer comprises an orthogonal time-of-flight mass spectrometer with a flight tube positioned orthogonal to said ion production axis.
- 73. The device of claim 1 wherein said time-of-flight mass analyzer comprises a linear time-of-flight mass spectrometer with a flight tube positioned coaxial with said ion production axis.
- 74. The device of claim 73 wherein said linear time-of-flight mass spectrometer employs delayed extraction techniques.
- 75. The device of claim 70 wherein the mass analyzer is selected from the group consisting of:
an ion trap; a quadrupole mass spectrometer; a magnetic sector mass analyzer; a tandem mass spectrometer; and a residual gas analyzer.
- 76. The device of claim 70 comprising thin-plate-orifice nozzle positioned along the ion production axis and operationally connected to the external end of the aerodynamic lens system and the mass analyzer.
- 77. The device of claim 76 wherein the thin-plate-orifice nozzle comprises a cylindrical opening, about 6 mm in diameter and about 10 mm long, and a thin plate aperture about 3 mm in diameter.
- 78. The device of claim 69 wherein said charged particle analyzer comprises an instrument for determining electrophoretic mobility of said gas phase ions.
- 79. The device of claim 78 wherein said instrument for determining electrophoretic mobility comprises a differential mobility analyzer.
- 80. A device for determining the identity, concentration or both of chemical species in a liquid sample containing the chemical species in a solvent, carrier liquid or both, said device comprising:
a) an electrically charged droplet source for generating a primary electrically charged droplet of the liquid sample in a flow of bath gas, wherein said primary electrically charged droplet has a selected droplet exit time and a momentum substantially directed along a droplet production axis; b) a charged droplet trap in fluid communication with the electrically charged droplet source and positioned along said droplet production axis at a selected distance downstream from said electrically charged droplet source, with respect to the flow of bath gas, for receiving the flow of bath gas and primary electrically charged droplet; wherein the primary electrically charged droplet remains in the charged droplet trap for a selected residence time sufficient to provide at least partial evaporation of solvent, carrier liquid or both from the primary electrically charged droplet generating at least one gas phase ion, at least one secondary electrically charged droplet of a selected size or a combination of at least one gas phase ion and at least one secondary electrically charged droplet of a selected size; wherein the gas phase ions, secondary electrically charged droplets of a selected size or both exit the trap along an ion production axis at a selected release time; and c) at least one flow inlet in fluid communication with said charged droplet source for introducing a flow of bath gas; and d) charge particle analyzer operationally connected to said charged droplet trap, for analyzing said gas phase ions.
- 81. The device of claim 80 wherein the charged particle analyzer comprises a mass analyzer operationally connected to the aerodynamic ion lens system to provide efficient introduction of said gas phase ions into said mass analyzer.
- 82. The device of claim 81 wherein said mass analyzer comprises a time-of-flight mass analyzer positioned along said ion production axis.
- 83. The device of claim 82 wherein said time-of-flight mass analyzer comprises an orthogonal time-of-flight mass spectrometer with a flight tube positioned orthogonal to said ion production axis.
- 84. The device of claim 82 wherein said time-of-flight mass analyzer comprises a linear time-of-flight mass spectrometer with a flight tube positioned coaxial with said ion production axis.
- 85. The device of claim 84 wherein said linear time-of-flight mass spectrometer employs delayed extraction techniques.
- 86. The device of claim 80 wherein the mass analyzer is selected from the group consisting of:
an ion trap; a quadrupole mass spectrometer; a magnetic sector mass analyzer; a tandem mass spectrometer; and a residual gas analyzer.
- 87. The device of claim 80 wherein said charged particle analyzer comprises an instrument for determining electrophoretic mobility of said gas phase ions.
- 88. The device of claim 87 wherein said instrument for determining electrophoretic mobility comprises a differential mobility analyzer.
- 89. A device for determining the identity, concentration or both of chemical species in a liquid sample containing the chemical species in a solvent, carrier liquid or both, said device comprising
a) an electrically charged droplet source for generating a primary electrically charged droplet of the liquid sample in a flow of bath gas, wherein said primary electrically charged droplet has a selected droplet exit time and a momentum substantially directed along a droplet production axis; b) a charged droplet trap in fluid communication with the electrically charged droplet source and positioned along said droplet production axis at a selected distance downstream from said electrically charged droplet source, with respect to the flow of bath gas, for receiving the flow of bath gas and primary electrically charged droplet; wherein the primary electrically charged droplet remains in the charged droplet trap for a selected residence time sufficient to provide at least partial evaporation of solvent, carrier liquid or both from the electrically charged droplet generating at least one gas phase ion, at least one secondary electrically charged droplet of a selected size or a combination of at least one gas phase ion and at least one secondary electrically charged droplet of a selected size; wherein the gas phase ions, secondary electrically charged droplets of a selected size or both exit the trap along an ion production axis at a selected release time; c) an aerodynamic ion lens system of selected length having an ion optical axis, an internal end and an external end, in fluid communication with the electrically charged droplet source and positioned at a selected distance downstream from the droplet trap, with respect to the flow of bath gas, for receiving the flow of bath gas, secondary electrically charged droplets of a selected size, gas phase ions or any combinations thereof, wherein the optical axis of the lens system is coaxial with the ion production axis, wherein the secondary electrically charged droplets of a selected size, gas phase ions or both enter the internal end and at least partial evaporation of solvent, carrier liquid or both from the secondary electrically charged droplets of a selected size in the aerodynamic ion lens system generates gas phase ions, wherein the flow of bath gas through the lens system focuses the spatial distribution of the secondary electrically charged droplets of a selected size, gas phase ions or both about the ion production axis and wherein the secondary electrically charged droplets, gas phase ions or both exit said external end of the aerodynamic ion lens system along said ion production axis; d) at least one flow inlet, in fluid communication with said charged droplet source for introducing the flow of bath gas.; and e) a charge particle analyzer operationally connected to said aerodynamic ion lens system, for analyzing said gas phase ions.
- 90. The device of claim 89 wherein the charged particle analyzer comprises a mass analyzer operationally connected to the aerodynamic ion lens system to provide efficient introduction of said gas phase ions into said mass analyzer.
- 91. The device of claim 90 wherein said mass analyzer comprises a time-of-flight mass analyzer positioned along said ion production axis.
- 92. The device of claim 91 wherein said time-of-flight mass analyzer comprises an orthogonal time-of-flight mass spectrometer with a flight tube positioned orthogonal to said ion production axis.
- 93. The device of claim 91 wherein said time-of-flight mass analyzer comprises a linear time-of-flight mass spectrometer with a flight tube positioned coaxial with said ion production axis.
- 94. The device of claim 93 wherein said linear time-of-flight mass spectrometer employs delayed extraction techniques.
- 95. The device of claim 90 wherein the mass analyzer is selected from the group consisting of:
an ion trap; a quadrupole mass spectrometer; a magnetic sector mass analyzer; a tandem mass spectrometer; and a residual gas analyzer.
- 96. The device of claim 90 comprising thin-plate-orifice nozzle positioned along the ion production axis and operationally connected to the external end of the aerodynamic lens system and the mass analyzer.
- 97. The device of claim 96 wherein the thin-plate-orifice nozzle comprises a cylindrical opening, about 6 mm in diameter and about 10 mm long, and a thin plate aperture about 3 mm in diameter.
- 98. The device of claim 89 wherein said charged particle analyzer comprises an instrument for determining electrophoretic mobility of said gas phase ions.
- 99. The device of claim 98 wherein said instrument for determining electrophoretic mobility comprises a differential mobility analyzer.
- 100. A device for determining the identity, concentration or both of chemical species in a liquid sample containing the chemical species in a solvent, carrier liquid or both, said device comprising:
a) a primary electrically charged droplet of the liquid sample held in a charged droplet trap, wherein the primary electrically charged droplet remains within the charged droplet trap for a selected residence time sufficient to provide at least partial evaporation of solvent, carrier liquid or both from the primary electrically charged droplet generating at least one gas phase ion, at least one secondary electrically charged droplet of a selected size or a combination of at least one gas phase ion and at least one secondary electrically charged droplet of a selected size that exit the trap along an ion production axis at a selected release time; and b) charge particle analyzer operationally connected to said droplet trap, for analyzing said gas phase ions, electrically charged droplets of a selected size or both.
- 101. A method of generating charged particles using the device of claim 1.
- 102. A method of generating charged particles using the device of claim 35.
- 103. A method of generating charged particles using the device of claim 36.
- 104. A method of generating gas phase ions using the device of claim 40.
- 105. A method of determining the identity and concentration of chemical species in a liquid sample containing chemical species in a solvent, carrier liquid or both using the device of claim 69.
- 106. A method of determining the identity and concentration of chemical species in a liquid sample containing chemical species in a solvent, carrier liquid or both using the device of claim 80.
- 107. A method of determining the identity and concentration of chemical species in a liquid sample containing chemical species in a solvent, carrier liquid or both using the device of claim 89.
- 108. A method of determining the identity and concentration of chemical species in a liquid sample containing chemical species in a solvent, carrier liquid or both using the device of claim 100.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) to provisional patent application No. 60/280,632, filed Mar. 29, 2001, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety to the extent not inconsistent with the disclosure herein.
STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT
[0002] The work was funded through grants by the United States government under NIH grants 1 RO1 HG01808-01, 2 R01 HG01808-04, and 1 R21 CA94341-01. The United States government has certain rights in this invention.
Provisional Applications (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
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60280632 |
Mar 2001 |
US |