1. Field of Invention
The present invention is intended to transmit ions from higher to lower pressure regions such as atmospheric pressure interfacing of ionization source to vacuum mass spectrometry or ion mobility spectrometry.
2. Description of Prior Art
Dispersive sources of ions at or near atmospheric pressure; such as, atmospheric pressure discharge ionization, chemical ionization, photoionization, or matrix assisted laser desorption ionization, and electrospray ionization generally have low sampling efficiency through conductance or transmission apertures, where less than 1% [often less than 1 ion in 10,000] of the ion current emanating from the ion source make it into the lower pressure regions of the present commercial interfaces for mass spectrometry.
Fenn, et al. (1985) U.S. Pat. No. 4,542,293 demonstrated the utility of utilizing a dielectric capillary to transport gas-phase ions from atmospheric pressure to low pressure where the viscous forces within a capillary push the ions against a potential gradient. This technology has the significant benefit of allowing grounded needles with electrospray sources. Unfortunately, this mainstream commercial technology transmits only a fraction of a percent of typical atmospheric pressure generated ions into the vacuum. The majority of ions being lost at the inlet due to dispersive fields dominating the motions of ions (FIG. 8). The requirement of capacitive charging of the tube for stable transmission, as well as, transmission being highly dependent on surface charging creates limitations on efficiencies with this technology. Contamination from condensation, ion deposition, and particulate materials can change the surface properties and the transmission. Because of the large surface area contained on the inner wall surface, a large amount of energy is stored and can discharge and damage the electrode surfaces. Care must also be taken to keep the outer surfaces clean and unobstructed, presumably in order not to deplete the image current that flows on the outer surface of the dielectric.
Chowdhury, et al. (1990) U.S. Pat. No. 4,977,320 demonstrated the use of heated metal capillaries to both generate and transmit ions into the vacuum. The efficiencies of this device are low as well. This technology samples both ions and charged droplets into the capillary where, with the addition of heat, ion desorption is facilitated. Undergoing coulomb explosions inside of a restricted volume of the tube will tend to cause dispersion losses to walls with this technique. In addition, this technique encounters the same limitation from dispersion losses at the inlet as the dielectric capillaries.
Lin and Sunner (1994) (J. American Society of Mass Spectrometry, Vol. 5, Number 10, pp. 873-885, October 1994) study a variety of effects on transmission through tubes of glass, metal, and Teflon. A wide variety of parameters were studied including capillary length, gas throughput, capillary diameter, and ion residence time. Effects from space charge, diffusion, gas flow, turbulence, spacing, and temperature where evaluated. These studies failed to identify the field dispersion at the inlet as the major loss mechanism for ions in capillaries. Some important insights where reported with respect to general transmission characteristics of capillary inlets.
Franzen (1998) U.S. Pat. No. 5,736,740 proposes the use of weakly conducting inner surfaces to prevent charge accumulation as a means to facilitate the focusing of ions toward the axis of the capillary. Although it is difficult to distinguish this art from Fenn in that the glass tubes utilized in commercial applications under Fenn also utilize weakly conducting dielectric surfaces, Franzen does argue effectively for the need to control the inner surface properties and the internal electric fields. This device will suffer from the same limitations as Fenn.
Franzen (1998) U.S. Pat. No. 5,747,799 also proposes for the need to focus ions at the inlet of capillaries and apertures in order enhance collection efficiencies. In this device the ions are said to be entrained into the flow by viscous friction. This invention fails to account for the dominance of the electric field on the motion of ions in the entrance region. At typical flow velocities at the entrance of tubes or apertures, the electric fields will dominate the ion motion and the ions that are not near the capillary axis will tend to disperse and be lost on the walls of the capillary or aperture inlet. With this device, a higher ion population can be presented to the conductance opening at the expense of higher field ratios and higher dispersion losses inside the tube.
Forssmann, et al. (2002) WO 03/010794 A2 utilizes funnel optics in front of an electrospray source in order to concentrate ions on an axis of flow by imposing focusing electrodes of higher electrical potential than the bottom of the so called accelerator device. This device frankly will not work. The ions formed by the electrospray process will be repelled by this optics configuration and little to no transmission will occur. Most of the inertial energy acquired by the ions in the source region is lost to collisions with neutral gas molecules at atmospheric pressure; consequently the only energy driving the ions in the direction of the conductance aperture will be the gas flow which under normal gas flows would be insufficient to push the ions up a field gradient. This device does not operate in fully developed flow as will be described in the present invention.
Fischer, et al. (2002) U.S. Pat. No. 6,359,275 B1 address the issue of charging of the inner surface of the capillary by coating the inner surface with a conductor in the dispersive region of the tube while still keeping the benefits of the dielectric tube transport in the nondispersive region of the capillary. This approach addresses the problem of charge accumulation, but it does not remove the significant losses due to dispersion at the inlet.
Fischer, et al. (2002) U.S. Pat. No. 6,486,469 B1 utilizes external electrodes and butted capillary tubes to provide enhanced control of the electric field within the capillary. This device does not address issues related to inlet losses as presented in FIG. 1. In addition, the device still required significantly large dielectric surfaces with the associated problems with charging, contamination, and discharge.
Fischer, et al. (2003) U.S. Patent Application US 2003/003452 A1 and Fischer, et al. (2003) U.S. Pat. No. 6,583,407 B1 utilized a variety of modifications to their dielectric tube device to enhance selectivity and control of ions as they traverse their capillary device. None of these modifications addresses the aforementioned limitations of these capillary devices.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,455,846 B1 to Prior et al. (2002) discloses a flared or horn inlet for introducing ions from an atmospheric ionization chamber into the vacuum chamber of a mass spectrometer. They also reported that the increase in ion current recorded in the mass spectrometer was directly proportional to the increase in the opening of the flared inlet.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,583,408 B2 to Smith et al. (2003) has recently utilized multi-capillary arrays as an inlet to their ion funnel technology. This device reports an advantage of bundle tubes over single opening conductance pathways, but fails to address the major issue relating to ion transmission loss, namely field dispersion of ions at the entrance of the conductance opening. A bundle of tubes without controlled field throughout the conductance path will still have significant losses when sampling higher field sources.
Ion movement at higher pressures is not governed by the ion-optical laws used to describe the movement of ions at lower pressures. At lower pressures, the mass of the ions and the influence of inertia on their movement play a prominent role. While at higher pressures the migration of ions in an electrical field is constantly impeded by collisions with the gas molecules. In essence at atmospheric pressure there is so many collisions that the ions have no “memory” of previous collisions and the initial energy of the ion is “forgotten”. Their movement is determined by the direction of the electrical field lines and the viscous flow of gases. At low viscous gas flow, the ions follow the electric field lines, while at higher viscous gas flow the movement is in the direction of the gas flow. Inventors have disclosed various means of moving ions at atmospheric pressure by shaping the electric field lines and directing the flow of gases.
Our co-pending U.S. Patent Application 60/419,699 (2003) describes the use of laminated tubes an apertures to control both field and flow in the entire conductance pathway from the entrance to the exit. Delaying dispersion until flow has fully developed is described in this patent as a technique to minimize dispersion losses within the conductance pathway.
The objective of the present invention is to maximize the transmission of ions from one pressure regime into an adjacent lower pressure region through an array of apertures in a laminated lens while minimizing the conductance of gas from the higher pressure into the lower pressure region. The relatively uniform electrostatic field through the laminated lens assures high transmission and low dispersion of the ions while in the conductance pathways of the lens. This condition does not exist in present-day ion conductance pathways in atmospheric or high pressure interfaces for mass spectrometers and will result in significantly higher ion transmission through conductance paths compared to the current art.
An important advantage of the device is the operation at lower gas loads into the lower pressure regions while maintaining the transmission of ions. This has beneficial implications including lower requirements for pumping, power, and general size. Conversely, this device has higher transmission of ions for a given total gas load on the lower pressure region resulting in more sensitive response for ion analyzers or higher currents for current deposition processes. Utilizing small apertures in the arrays results in very low electrostatic field penetration into the lower pressure region relative to larger apertures with higher conductance.
Another important advantage of the present device is the decrease in contamination from sample deposition along the conductance path and the associated reduction in required maintenance, system drift, charging, and potential carryover from sample to sample due to deposition.
An important object of the present invention is the use of matched ion optics to the conductance pattern. The macroscopic lenses can be patterned to focus the ions to a microscopic compressed pattern of conductance opening. In other words, with patterned arrays we can focus the ions to an exact pattern of conductance openings rather than being required to focus to a single opening of a tube or aperture.
Another important advantage of conductance arrays is the ability to measure the transmission of ions in discrete packets, each representative of a portion of the delivered cross-section from a source of ions. With this capability we are able to independent measure each pathway to discern the cross-section composition of a source of ions. This increased information content adds a enhance dimension to analysis where composition across a cross-section may provide diagnostic, feedback, or analytical information.
It is the objective of this invention to facilitate higher transmission of ions from any number of pressure regimes, including above atmospheric pressure, atmospheric pressure, and intermediate pressures. There may be practical uses of this approach even in the millitorr region, although inertial components of motion and scattering will begin to degrade performance below about one torr.
The device is intended to be used for transmission of ions from higher pressure ion sources to lower pressure destinations. Examples of ionization sources operating at high pressures would be atmospheric pressure or intermediate pressure sources, such as electrospray (ES), atmospheric pressure chemical (APCI) and photoionization (APPI), inductively coupled plasmas (ICP), and MALDI (both atmospheric pressure and reduced pressures). Examples of lower pressure destinations would be ion analyzers such as mass spectrometers or ion mobility spectrometers, and surfaces in vacuum where the deposition of thin films and etching processes are preformed.
In accordance with the present invention an ion enrichment aperture comprises a laminated lens comprised of alternate layers of insulators and metal laminates, having a plurality of openings in a prescribed pattern establishing an interface between two pressure regions.
A preferred embodiment of the ion selective multi-aperture laminate of the present invention is illustrated in
The multi-aperture lens is populated with many holes or apertures 46 that traverse the lens leading from higher pressure ion collection region 32 to lower pressure region 50. The inlets of the apertures 46 are downstream of the ion source region 30 and ion collection region 32. The inlets accept ions from the region 32. The ions are transfer to the outlet of the apertures 46 and exit into the lower pressure region 50 and are collected in destination region 70.
The multi-aperture laminates rest on an O-ring 62 which isolate the metal surface 48 from the chamber wall 60. In the preferred embodiment, the wall is the vacuum chamber of a gas-phase ion detector, such as, but not limited to a mass spectrometer. The O-ring also serves as a vacuum seal. The wall is made of an insulating material, such as, polyimide or glass. However, the wall can consist of any material that can contain a low pressure, such as, nylon, polycarbonate, ploy ether ether ketone (PEEK), stainless steel, aluminum, etc.
The metal laminates may be deposited on the base by vapor deposition and the holes or apertures formed by ablating away the metal and base using a laser. Alternatively the multi-aperture lens may be manufactured by using the techniques of microelectronics fabrication: photolithography for creating patterns, etching for removing material, and deposition for coating the surfaces with specific materials.
The multi-aperture laminate is typically 1 mm to 3 mm in thickness, and has overall dimensions roughly 30 mm×30 mm (square shape) to a diameter of roughly 30 mm (circular shaped). The apertures of the lens are circular in shape as shown in FIG. 2. In other embodiments, the apertures can be but not limited to rectangular or oblong shapes.
FIGS. 3—Additional Embodiments
There are various possibilities with regard to the number and type of laminates that can make up the laminated multi-aperture lens.
One additional embodiment seen in
Another additional embodiment seen in
An additional embodiment is shown in
Operation—
The manner of using the multi-aperture laminate to introduce ions from atmospheric pressure ion sources (API), such as but not limited to, electrospray, atmospheric pressure chemical ionization, or inductively coupled plasma ion sources into a vacuum system is as follows. Ions at or near atmospheric pressure in the ion source region 30 are directed towards the metal surface 40 along the lines of the electrical force fields. Near the metal surface the ions are focused into the inlets of the apertures 46 by following the electrical force fields emanating outward toward the ion source region 30. At the same time they are entrained for the most part by the gas also entering the inlets of the apertures from region 32 and transferred through the aperture into the low-pressure region 50 and collected in region 70 (as shown in FIG. 1). Through suitable potentials at the ion source region 30, metal surfaces 40 and 48, and region 70, the electrical force fields are formed. For positive ions, typically the metal laminate 40 is at ground potential while the electrical potential of the metal laminate 48 is selected to cause the electrical field lines emanating from the apertures to be converging into the inlet of the apertures. Region 70 is at a lower potential relative to metal laminate 48. The exact potentials will depend on the thickness of the base 44, the metal laminates 40 and 48; and the diameters of the apertures. The conditions for ion transmission are that the electric fields inside of the conductance pathway between the metal laminates must be substantially higher than the electric field in the collection region 32. Under these conditions, ions will compress into the cross section of the apertures 46 from the entire incident surface of ions. Another important condition of operation is that the electric field within the conductance pathway (i.e. between the inlet and outlet of 46) must be fairly uniform to prevent ions entering the aperture from dispersing to the walls of the opening. This will result in charging of surface. Ions are swept through the conductance pathway without appreciable radial dispersion by either electric field or viscous flow.
It should also be noted that the operation of these ion selective aperture array may occur across any number of pressure differentials, including, but not limited to atmospheric pressure (AP) to first pumping stage in mass spec; above AP to AP for high pressure applications; and first pumping stage (˜10 Torr) to second stage (˜0.1 Torr) in a differentially pumped vacuum system. One important operating boundary will be the discharge limit associated with any given pressure regime. Obviously, we are limited to lower electrostatic field strengths for compression when operation at the minimum of the Paschen Curve.
It is generally anticipated that the relative pressure between region 32 and region 50 are at least a factor of two although, factors of 10 or more can be obtained with increased pumping (with vacuum destinations) or increased pressure source with above atmospheric pressure sources.
Operation of Additional Embodiments—
The aperture length L of the present device may be increased by the addition of insulated laminate 52 and addition metal laminate 54. The conductance pathway in this device is operated under the conditions of tube flow which decreases the conductance for a given cross sectional area of the collective apertures 46.
In general, the operation of the embodiment illustrated in
It is anticipated that the electrostatic field down the entire length of L should be kept fairly uniform under normal operation. Slightly dispersive fields may be overcome with the viscous flow within the tube as described in our co-pending patent (U.S. Patent Application 60/419,699).
Operation of Additional Embodiments—
Key to operation of this embodiment is the precise alignment of the ion beams 14 with the conductance apertures 46 in the laminated surface. We envision that this alignment requires that the apertures 83 be aligned electro-optically with aperture 46. This can be accomplished with high precision assembly or x-y translational stages 16. These can be controlled and manipulated with verniers or stepper motors. Detectors (as illustrated in
In some implementations of the present device, some dispersion will be tolerated at the low pressure side. Such as, when the destination region is the entrance of a radio frequency (RF) ion guide. When the ions are introduced into the entrance of the RF ion guide they would be refocused on-axis by means of collisional damping in the pseudo-potential well of the ion guide.
As with
In some implementations of the present device, some dispersion will be tolerated at the low pressure side as outline in
As shown in
Conclusion, Ramifications, and Scope
Accordingly, the reader will see that the ion enrichment aperture arrays of this invention can be used to introduce gas-phase ions and charged particles into lower pressure regions, such as the vacuum chamber of a mass spectrometer, without imparting large gas loads on the vacuum system; can be used to accept and pass into a lower pressure region an incident ion beam with a prescribed pattern; and can be used to sample an ion beam of whose cross-section is many times the cross section of the individual openings of the ion enrichment aperture. In addition, when an ion enrichment aperture array is used in conjunction with our high transmission lens, laminated or unlaminated, dispersive plasma of gas-phase ions and charged particles can be sampled and introduced into lower pressure regions without imparting a large gas load on the vacuum system. Furthermore, the ion enrichment aperture has the additional advantages in that:
Although the description above contain many specifications, these should not be construed as limiting the scope of the invention but as merely providing illustrations of some of the presently preferred embodiments of this invention. For example, the lens can have other shapes, such as circular, oval, triangular, etc.; the openings can have other shapes; insulator and metal laminates can be manufactured by using the techniques of microelectronics fabrication, photolithography for creating patterns, etching for removing material, and deposition for coating the insulating base with specific materials; the number of laminates, the relative thickness of adjacent laminates and the size and shape of the individual openings can vary depending on the source of ions, the type of ion collection region, the pressure drop across the lens or a combination of all three, etc.
Thus the scope of the invention should be determined by the appended claims and their legal equivalents, rather than by the examples given.
This application is entitled to the benefit of Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/476,582, filed Jun. 7, 2003. This application is related to Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/210,677, filed Jun. 9, 2000, and patent application Ser. No. 09/877,167, filed Jun. 8, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,744,041, issued Jun. 1, 2004; Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/293,648, filed May 26, 2001, now patent application Ser. No. 10/155,151, filed May 25, 2002; Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/384,869, filed Jun. 1, 2002, now patent application Ser. No. 10/499,147, filed May 31, 2003; Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/410,653, filed Sep. 13, 2002, now patent application Ser. No. 10/661,842, filed Sep. 12, 2003; Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/419,699, filed Oct. 18, 2002, now patent application Ser. No. 10/688,021, filed Oct. 17, 2003; and Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/476,576, filed Jun. 7, 2003. Each of the above identified related applications are incorporated herein by reference.
The invention described herein was made with the United States Government support under Grant Number: 1 R43 RR143396-1 from the Department of Health and Human Services. The U.S. Government may have certain rights to this invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6744041 | Sheehan et al. | Jun 2004 | B2 |
6818889 | Sheehan et al. | Nov 2004 | B1 |
20020011560 | Sheehan et al. | Jan 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040245458 A1 | Dec 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60476582 | Jun 2003 | US |