The present application claims priority from Japanese application JP 2006-237892 filed on Sep. 1, 2006, the content of which is hereby incorporated by reference into this application.
The present invention belongs to the field of mass spectrometry technology and, more particularly, relates to a gas monitoring apparatus for measuring the concentration(s) of a chemical warfare agent(s) in the atmosphere using a mass spectrometer and displaying the same.
The threat of terrorism is increasing all over the world. As for chemical terrorism using a chemical warfare agent (hereinafter referred to as “chemical agent”), in particular, the production of such a chemical agent is easier when compared with production of nuclear weapons and, once really committed, it caused a serious damage, so that every country is taking strict precautions against it. In Japan, too, a chemical agent was misused in the Matsumoto and Subway sarin gas incidents, among others, and it is urgent that measures be taken against chemical agents. Further, it has become evident that chemical weapons estimably produced by the old Japanese army during the wartime are buried in China and in Japan; reportedly, if chemical agents are allowed to leak out into the environment during construction work, for instance, it caused health damages in some instances. It is required that abandoned chemical weapons and chemical agents retained therein be dug up, recovered and rendered harmless safely and promptly.
In case of actual use or leakage of a chemical agent, it is necessary to immediately know the chemical agent species and the concentration thereof in the atmosphere and utilize the information obtained in inhabitant evacuation, treatment and decontamination. Therefore, a chemical agent detector utilizing the technology of mass spectrometric analysis, which is known as a method excellent in speed, sensitivity and selectivity among various analytical methods, has been proposed (JP 2004-158296 A and JP 2004-286648 A). Referring to
As a gas monitoring apparatus which utilizes atmospheric pressure chemical ionization mass spectrometry, an exhaust gas monitoring apparatus is disclosed in JP 2000-162189 A. In this apparatus, an exhaust gas is taken into an atmospheric pressure chemical ionization mass spectrometer and the concentration of dioxin and related compounds contained in the exhaust gas is displayed. JP 2005-274566 A describes that lewisite, diphenylcyanoarsine and/or diphenylchloroarsine is subjected to derivatization treatment and then analyzed by a gas analyzer.
Detailed investigations have so far been made concerning the methods of analyzing and detecting lethal chemical agents such as sarin. On the other hand, diphenylcyanoarsine (hereinafter referred to as DC) and diphenylchloroarsine (hereinafter referred to as DA) developed for suppressing riots and called sneezing agents or emetics have not been produced since the Second World War and, therefore, methods of analyzing or detecting these agents DC and DA have seldom been investigated. However, it is to be worried that, in the treatment of abandoned chemical weapons, health damage and environmental pollution may be caused by those DC and DA produced in the past.
JP 2005-274565 A discloses a technology of analyzing DC and DA which comprises derivatization treatment thereof, followed by analysis using a gas analyzer. However, this method still has two problems in the following points.
The first problem is the detection time problem. The above technology includes the steps of collection, by suction, of a sample gas→derivatization treatment→analysis by a gas chromatograph and, therefore, it seems that scores of minutes is required for obtaining the results. Since, however, once a person is exposed to a chemical agent, the effect thereof is produced in an instant, it is necessary, on the occasion of chemical agent leakage, to issue a warning as soon as possible. Thus, an apparatus which can detect DC and DA simultaneously without needing any complicated procedure has been demanded.
The second problem is the sensitivity problem. Upon derivatization treatment, as in the above technology, DC and DA are converted to one and the same substance. Therefore, the total amount of DC and DA can be determined but a problem remains, namely the respective concentrations of DC and DA cannot be known. While no detailed toxic data for DC and DA are available, the median lethal dose (concentration which is lethal to half of persons exposed to that concentration for 1 minute) of DC is estimated to be 1000-10000 mg-min/m3 and that of DA to be about 15000 mg-min/m3. Thus, DC is considered to be more toxic than DA. Therefore, in case when a worker engaged in abandoned chemical agent treatment should be exposed to DC and/or DA, it is important, in deciding the method of treatment, among others, to know the individual concentrations.
For such reasons as mentioned above, a chemical agent monitoring apparatus by which the respective concentrations of DC and DA can be known without delay has been desired.
The present invention provides a chemical agent monitoring apparatus capable of determining the respective concentrations of DC and DA simultaneously by utilizing the technology of atmospheric pressure chemical ionization mass spectrometry.
More specifically, the gas monitoring apparatus of the invention comprises a gas introduction section for introducing a sample gas, an ion source for ionizing components contained in the sample gas by corona discharge, a mass spectrometer for analyzing the ions formed by the ion source for m/z (value resulting from division of the mass by the valence), an operation section for calculating the concentrations of measurement target substances contained in the sample gas based on the ion intensity data obtained by the mass spectrometer, and a display section for displaying the operation results obtained in the operation section, in which apparatus the sum total concentration of diphenylcyanoarsine and diphenylchloroarsine are calculated from a signal common to diphenylcyanoarsine and diphenylchloroarsine included in the measurement target substances, the concentration of diphenylcyanoarsine is calculated from a signal specific to diphenylcyanoarsine and the concentration of diphenylchloroarsine is calculated from the difference between the sum total concentration and the concentration of diphenylcyanoarsine. On that occasion, the m/z=229 ion intensity signal is preferably used as the signal common to diphenylcyanoarsine and diphenylchloroarsine, and the m/z=256 ion intensity signal as the signal specific to diphenylcyanoarsine.
If a chemical agent leakage accident should occur during abandoned chemical weapon treatment, the exact concentrations of DC and DA can be known in an instant in accordance with the present invention. Therefore, the information about the chemical agent species leaked out and the concentrations thereof, which are important in carrying out evacuation and leading of workers and nearby residents, treatment thereof and decontamination, among others, can be promptly provided. Since the respective concentrations of DC and DA, which differ in toxicity, can be determined, evacuation, treatment, decontamination and like dealing with the aftermath can be carried out appropriately.
In the following, referring to the drawings, certain modes of embodiment of the present invention are described in detail.
On the occasion of digging up and recovering, among others, of an abandoned chemical weapon, there is the risk of contamination of the soil by a chemical agent and, in addition, there is the possibility of an undiscovered chemical weapon, for instance, being contained in the soil and, therefore, careful management is required. Thus, a tent 22 is set up in the vicinity of the digging up/recovering site 21. It is necessary to maintain the inside of the tent 22 at a negative pressure relative to the outside open air so that even when a chemical agent gas is generated within the inside, the gas may be prevented from leaking out of the tent. For that purpose, the air inside the tent 22 is always exhausted by an exhaust fan 23, while the open air is fed to the tent inside through an air inlet 33. The pressure within the tent 22 is determined by the conductance balance between air intake and air exhaustion. The exhaust pipe 25 for exhausting the air in the tent 22 to the outside is provided with a chemical agent removing filter 24 such as an active carbon filter and, thus, even if a chemical agent gas is generated in the process of working inside the tent 22, the leakage of the gas to the outside can be prevented. However, in preparation for a filter trouble, for example filter breakthrough, a part of the gas in the exhaust pipe 25 is branched by an introduction pipeline 28 and introduced into a chemical agent detector 29. The detection signal from the chemical agent detector 29 is sent to a data processor 30. The data processor 30 refers to a database 31 storing chemical agent-derived signals, calculates the chemical agent concentration from the relation between the signal detected by the chemical agent detector 29 and the chemical agent concentration (namely sensitivity), and causes the chemical agent concentration to be displayed in a display section 32.
The information stored in the database 31 includes substance names 101, sites of signals appearing on a mass spectrum (m/z) and sensitivities 102, 103 and 104 at respective m/z values, among others, as shown, for example, in
The ions formed are introduced into the ion drift section 34 through the opening 40 of a counter electrode 39 under the influence of an electric field. On this occasion, it is possible to drift the ions and efficiently introduce them into a first narrow orifice 41. The ions introduced from the first narrow orifice 41 are introduced into a vacuum section 44 through a second narrow office 42 and a third narrow orifice 43. The flow rate control of the gas flowing into the corona discharge section 35 is important for high-sensitivity and stable detection. For this purpose, a flow rate controlling section 45 is preferably provided in an exhaust gas pipeline 36b. The ion drift section 34, corona discharge section 35 and introduction pipeline 28, among others, are preferably heated by means of heaters (not shown) or the like from the viewpoint of preventing the sample from being adsorbed thereon. While the rates of flow of the gas passing through the introduction pipeline 28 and exhaust pipeline 36a can be determined by the capacity of a suction pump 46, for example a diaphragm pump, and the pipeline conductance, it is also possible to provide a control device such as a flow rate controller 45 in the introduction pipeline 28 and/or exhaust pipeline 36a. By providing the suction pump 46 downstream from the ion formation section (namely the corona discharge section 35 in the constitution illustrated) in the direction of gas flow, it becomes possible to reduce the influence of contamination (e.g. adsorption of the sample) of the inside of the suction pump 46 on the measurement.
Among the electrodes respectively having the narrow orifices 41, 42 and 43, there are provided differential exhaustion sections 49a and 49b, which are exhausted by a roughing vacuum pump 50. Generally used as the roughing vacuum pump 50 is a rotary pump, scroll pump or mechanical booster pump, for instance. A voltage can be applied to the electrodes having the narrow orifices 41, 42 and 43 by a power source (not shown) so that the ion permeability of the differential exhaustion sections 49a and 49b may be improved and, at the same time, cluster ions formed by adiabatic expansion may be cleaved by collision with remaining molecules. In
The ions formed after passage through the third narrow orifice 43 are converged by a convergent lens 51. An einzel lens consisting of three electrodes, for instance, is generally used as the convergent lens 51. The ions further pass through a slit electrode 52. The structure is such that the ions that have passed through the third narrow orifice 43 are focused on the opening section of the slit electrode 52 by the convergent lens 51 and pass therethrough, while the neutral and other particles not focused collide with this slit portion and hardly enter the mass spectrometer side. The ions that have passed through the slit electrode 52 are deflected and focused by means of a double cylinder type deflector 55 consisting of an inner cylindrical electrode 53 and an outer cylindrical electrode 54 each having a large number of openings. In the double cylinder type deflector 55, the deflection and focusing are realized by utilizing the electric field of the outer cylindrical electrode as spreading from the opening of the inner cylindrical electrode. This is described in detail in JP 07(1995)-85834. The ions that have passed through the double cylinder type deflector 55 are introduced into the ion trap mass spectrometer constituted of a ring electrode 56 and end gap electrodes 57a and 57b. There is provided a gate electrode 58 for controlling the timing of injection of the ions into the mass spectrometer. Flange electrodes 59a and 59b are provided for preventing quartz rings 60a and 60b, which hold the ring electrode 56 and end cap electrodes 57a and 57b, from being charged by ions arriving at the quartz rings 60a and 60b. Helium is fed from a helium gas feeding pipe (not shown) to the ion trap mass spectrometer inside and the pressure therein is maintained at about 0.1 pascal. The ion trap mass spectrometer is controlled by a mass spectrometer controlling section (not shown).
The ions introduced into the mass spectrometer collide with the helium gas and lose their energy and are entrapped by an alternating electric field. Upon scanning with a high frequency voltage applied upon the ring electrode 56 and end gap electrodes 57a and 57b, the ions entrapped are discharged out of the ion trap mass spectrometer according to the m/z values of the ions and, after passage through an ion outlet lens 61, are detected by a detector 62. The signals detected are amplified by an amplifier 63 and then processed in a data processor 64. The ion trap mass spectrometer has a characteristic feature in that it entraps ions within the inside thereof (in a space surrounded by the ring electrode 56 and the end gap electrodes 57a and 57b), so that even when the concentration of the detection target substance(s) is low and the amount of ions formed is small, the ions can be detected by prolonging the ion introduction time. Therefore, even when the sample concentration is low, ions can be concentrated at a high rate in the ion trap mass spectrometer and thus the sample pretreatment (e.g. concentration) can be very much simplified.
Now, a mass spectrum of DC as obtained in the chemical agent monitoring apparatus described above referring to
In the positive atmospheric pressure chemical ionization mass spectrometry, water vapor is involved in the main ionization processes. First, nitrogen molecules are ionized by corona discharge and the nitrogen molecule ions are immediately ionize water vapor in the atmosphere to form hydronium ions (H3O+). Many chemical substances are ionized by the chemical reaction with these hydronium ions.
The molecular weight of DC is 255 and the ions observed upon atmospheric pressure chemical ionization are always monovalent and, therefore, the signal observed at m/z=256 is considered to be a pseudomolecular ion resulting from addition of a proton to DC as formed by the reaction:
DC+H3O+→(DC+H)++H2O (1)
The ion observed at m/z=229 is considered to be a decomposition product ion resulting from elimination of CN from DC as formed by the reaction:
DC+H3O+→(DC−CN)++HCN+H2O (2)
Now,
Since DA has a molecular weight of 264, the signal observed at m/z=265 is considered to be a pseudomolecular ion resulting from addition of a proton to DA as formed by the reaction:
DA+H3O+→(DA+H)++H2O (3)
The ion observed at m/z=229 is considered to be a decomposition product ion resulting from elimination of Cl from DA as formed by the reaction:
DA+H3O+→(DC−Cl)++HCl+H2O (4)
Upon injection of the sample solutions, the signals shown in
For determining the individual concentrations of DC and DA, it is enough to measure the respective specific signals, namely the m/z=256 and m/z=265 signals. As is evident from
(DC+H)+→(DC−CN)++HCN (5).
Then, when tandem mass spectrometry was carried out with the DA-derived m/z=265 ion as a precursor ion, the dissociation of m/z=265→229 was observed. This is considered to be the result of occurrence of the reaction:
(DA+H)+→(DA−Cl)++HCl (6).
Now, the results of an investigation concerning the lower DC detection limit in m/z=256→229 tandem mass spectrometry using the apparatus disclosed herein are described. In this experiment, a 10-liter stainless steel container was used. A hexane solution containing DC dissolved therein was poured into the stainless container and a desired concentration of DC gas was generated by allowing evaporation, the container was then connected with the apparatus and the DC-due ion intensity was measured.
In the above experiment, the time required for each measurement was about 2 seconds. Therefore, once an alarm threshold value is determined by obtaining data for the air at the site of measurement and determining the standard deviation σ of the background, it is possible to immediately detect DC in case of leakage thereof and give an alarm. Since the DC concentration can be easily determined from the calibration curve and signal intensity, it is possible to measure the DC concentration, even when it is very low, almost on the real time basis in accordance with the present invention.
Then, the lower detection limit for DA in tandem mass spectrometry based on the m/z=265→229 dissociation was determined in the same manner as in the above-mentioned case of DC and was found to be about 1 μg/m3. This is because DA is more readily decomposed as compared with DC. As is evident from comparison between
As described above, it was found, as a result of the experiments, that, in determining the DA concentration at a very low level, namely 1 μg/m3 or lower, on the real time basis, it is recommendable to calculate the total concentration of DC and DA based on a signal (e.g. m/z=229) common to DC and DA, calculate the DC concentration from the m/z=256→229 signal specific to DC and calculate the DA concentration as the difference between both.
For confirmation, the results of comparison of the m/z=229, 256 and 265 signal intensities obtained from DA and DC are shown in
First,
Since the m/z=229 signal is due to a decomposition product, the intensity ratio between m/z=229 and 256 or 265 varies when the measurement conditions, for example the temperature of the narrow orifice-forming electrodes or/and the discharge current in the corona discharge section, are changed. However, when repeated evaluations were made using one and the same apparatus under standardized measurement conditions, the intensity ratio was almost constant.
Then, a solution of a mixture of DC and DA was prepared and injected into the introduction pipeline 28. The results obtained are shown in
After all, at very low DA concentrations, it becomes difficult to detect the m/z=265 signal specific to DA. However, when the intensity ratios among the m/z=229, 256 and 265 signals are measured in advance using DC and DA and are used to create a database according to the apparatus and experimental conditions, the concentration of DA can be estimated from the intensities of the m/z=229 signal common to DC and DA and the m/z=256 signal specific to DC even if the m/z=265 signal cannot be obtained.
A flow for estimating the DA concentration is shown in
According to the invention, the concentrations of DC or/and DA at very low levels can be known rapidly and exactly and, therefore, environmental leakage monitoring becomes possible in abandoned chemical weapon treatment or the like and the invention can thus contribute to the safety of workers and nearby residents, among others.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2006-237892 | Sep 2006 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6435003 | Warburton | Aug 2002 | B1 |
20020048818 | Sakairi et al. | Apr 2002 | A1 |
20040113063 | Davis | Jun 2004 | A1 |
20050247871 | Bryden et al. | Nov 2005 | A1 |
20070141630 | Gadek et al. | Jun 2007 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2000-162189 | Jun 2000 | JP |
2004-158296 | Jun 2004 | JP |
2004-286648 | Oct 2004 | JP |
2005-274565 | Oct 2005 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080054172 A1 | Mar 2008 | US |