Claims
- 1. An ion trap mass spectrometer comprising:
a body of conductive material having first and second major surfaces, a plurality of parallel holes extending through said body from the first major surface to the second major surface each forming the ring electrode of an ion trap, a first electrode spaced from said first major surface of said body, a second electrode spaced from said second major surface of said body, said first and second electrodes forming an endcap for each of said ring electrodes to define a plurality of parallel ion traps.
- 2. An ion trap mass spectrometer as in claim 1 in which said plurality of holes are cylindrical.
- 3. An ion trap mass spectrometer as in claims 1 or 2 in which the plurality of holes are of the same diameter.
- 4. A mass spectrometer as in claims 1 or 2 in which the plurality of holes are of different diameters.
- 5. A mass spectrometer as in claims 1 or 2 in which the plurality of holes include holes of the same diameter and holes of different diameters.
- 6. A mass spectrometer as in claims 1 or 2 in which one surface of said body is shaped to provide areas of said body that have different thicknesses whereby the holes have different lengths and the corresponding electrode is similarly shaped.
- 7. A mass spectrometer as in claim 6 in which the diameter of the holes having a greater length is greater than the diameter of the holes having a shorter length.
- 8. An ion trap mass spectrometer comprising:
a disc-shaped body of conductive material having first and second major surfaces with at least one of said surfaces shaped such that said body has annular regions of different thickness, a plurality of holes extending through said body from the first major surface to the second major surface, each forming the ring electrode of a trap, said holes extending through the thinner annular regions having a smaller diameter than the holes extending through the thicker annular regions, a first electrode shaped to conform to the shape of the first major surface of said body, a second electrode shaped to conform to the shape of the second major surface of said body, said first and second electrodes forming an endcap for each of said ring electrodes to define a plurality of parallel ion traps.
- 9. An ion trap mass spectrometer as in claim 8 in which the plurality of holes are cylindrical.
- 10. An ion trap mass spectrometer as in claims 8 or 9 in which the plurality of holes in each said different annular regions are of the same diameter.
- 11. An ion trap mass spectrometer comprising:
a body of conductive material having first and second major surfaces, a plurality of parallel holes extending through said body from the first major surface to the second major surface, each forming the ring electrode of an ion trap, a first electrode spaced from said first major surface of said body, a second electrode spaced from said second major surface of said body, said first and second electrodes forming an endcap for each of said ring electrodes to define a plurality of parallel ion traps, means for forming ions in said ion traps or for injecting ions into said ion traps and means for applying dc and/or rf voltage to said conductive body to trap ions of predetermined mass-to-charge ratio in each of said ion traps.
- 12. An ion trap mass spectrometer as in claim 11 in which said plurality of holes are cylindrical.
- 13. An ion trap mass spectrometer as in claims 11 or 12 in which the plurality of holes are of the same diameter.
- 14. A mass spectrometer as in claims 11 or 12 in which the plurality of holes are of different diameters.
- 15. A mass spectrometer as in claims 11 or 12 in which the plurality of holes include holes of the same diameter and holes of different diameters.
- 16. A mass spectrometer as in claims 11 or 12 in which one surface of said body is shaped to provide areas of said body that have different thickness whereby the holes have different lengths and the corresponding electrode is similarly shaped.
- 17. A mass spectrometer as in claim 16 in which the diameter of the holes having a greater length is greater than the diameter of the holes having a shorter length.
- 18. A mass spectrometer as in claims 11 or 12 in which said means for injecting ions into said ion trap includes means associated with each ion trap.
- 19. A mass spectrometer as in claims 11 or 12 including means for applying ejection voltages to said endcaps to eject the trapped ions of predetermined mass-to-charge ratio.
- 20. A mass spectrometer as in claim 19 including detector means for receiving the ejected ions.
- 21. A mass spectrometer as in claim 20 in which said detector means includes a detector for each of said parallel ion traps.
- 22. An ion trap mass spectrometer as in claims 1, 2, 11 or 12 in which the first and second electrodes are a conductive mesh.
- 23. An ion trap mass spectrometer comprising a first parallel array of ion traps including:
a body of conductive material having first and second major surfaces, a plurality of parallel holes extending through said body from the first major surface to the second major surface, each forming the ring electrode of an ion trap, a first electrode spaced from said first major surface of said body, a second electrode spaced from said second major surface of said body, said first and second electrodes forming an endcap for each of said ring electrodes to define said first parallel array of ion traps, and a second parallel array of ion traps including:
a body of conductive material having first and second major surfaces, a plurality of parallel holes extending through said body from the first major surface to the second major surface, each forming the ring electrode of an ion trap, a first electrode spaced from said first major surface of said body, a second electrode spaced from said second major surface of said body, said first and second electrodes forming an endcap for each of said ring electrodes to define said second parallel array of ion traps, said first parallel array of ion traps positioned so that the second electrodes of said first parallel array of ion traps faces the first electrode of said second parallel array of ion traps to form a tandem mass spectrometer.
- 24. An ion trap mass spectrometer as in claim 23 in which said plurality of holes in each of said parallel arrays are cylindrical.
- 25. An ion trap mass spectrometer as in claims 23 or 24 in which the plurality of holes in each of said parallel arrays are of the same diameter.
- 26. A mass spectrometer as in claims 23 or 24 in which the plurality of holes in each of said parallel arrays are of different diameters.
- 27. A mass spectrometer as in claims 23 or 24 in which the plurality of holes in each of said parallel arrays include holes of the same diameter and holes of different diameters.
- 28. A tandem mass spectrometer as in claim 23 in which means are provided for forming ions in each of said ion traps or for injecting ions into said ion traps of the first parallel array,
means for applying a dc and/or rf voltage to the body of the first parallel array to trap ions of predetermined mass-to-charge ratio in each of said traps, means for ejecting ions from said first parallel array into the ion traps of said second array, and means for applying a dc and/or rf voltage to the body of said second parallel array to capture ions of predetermined mass-to-charge ratio received from the first parallel array of ion traps.
- 29. A mass analyzer as in claim 4 in which the diameter of the holes is selected to trap ions of selected masses in each of the ion traps.
- 30. A mass analyzer as in claim 4 in which the diameter of the holes is increased in small steps to increase the resolution of the ion trap.
- 31. A mass analyzer as in claim 11 in which the trap size and the dc and/or rf voltage is selected to trap ions of a single mass-to-charge ratio to trap a specific chemical species and/or its fragment ions or the products of ion molecule reactions.
- 32. An ion trap mass spectrometer comprising a plurality of ion traps each including
a ring electrode and end cap electrodes, means for applying the same rf/dc trapping voltages to said ion traps whereby to trap ions of mass-to-charge ratio determined by the r0/z0, dimensions of each of said ion traps.
- 33. An ion trap mass spectrometer as in claim 32 in which the r0 and z0 dimensions of each of said ion traps is equal to thereby trap ions of the same mass-to-charge ratio in each of said traps.
- 34. An ion trap mass spectrometer as in claim 32 in which the r0 and z0 dimensions of selected ion traps are different to thereby trap ions of different mass-to-charge ratio in each of said ions traps having a different r0 and z0 dimensions.
- 35. An ion trap mass spectrometer as in claim 34 which includes a plurality of ion traps of the same r0 and z0 dimension.
- 36. An ion trap mass spectrometer as in claims 32, 33, 34 or 35 including means for forming ions in each of said ion traps or for injecting ions into said ion traps.
- 37. An ion trap mass spectrometer as in claims 32, 33, 34 or 35 including means for detecting ions trapped in each of said ion traps.
- 38. An ion trap mass spectrometer as in claims 32, 33, 34 or 35 in which the ions trapped in each of said ion traps are destructively detected.
- 39. An ion trap mass spectrometer as in claims 32, 33, 34 or 35 in which the ions trapped in each of said ion traps are non-destructively detected.
- 40. An ion trap mass spectrometer as in claims 32, 33, 34 or 35 in which said ion traps are operated in parallel.
- 41. A mass spectrometer as in claims 32, 33, 34 or 35 in which a first and second plurality of ion traps are arranged in tandem, whereby ions trapped in the first plurality of ion traps can be transferred to the second plurality of ion traps.
GOVERNMENT SUPPORT
[0001] This invention was made with Government support under Contract No. 530-1440 ONR Grant No. N00014-97-0251 awarded by the United States Office of Naval Research. The Government has certain rights to this invention.