The teachings described herein relate to lens pulsing in mass spectrometry analysis.
Transporting of ions through stages in mass spectrometers is commonly performed using several interfacing apparatus. In some cases, gating mechanisms can be utilized to control the flow of ions between the various stages. A skimmer cone consisting of a large cone shaped disc that contains a small hole or aperture at the centre is used to select ions that may be radially separated. Generally ions from the central portion of an ion beam are selected for transmission with the remaining ions being removed. The pulsing of the skimmer voltage can be utilized to introduce an artificial duty cycle to cause modulation of an ion beam which can reduce the total ion current in exceptionally bright beams. Such pulsing consists of switching the voltage of the skimmer between two voltages, one in which ions can pass through the skimmer and one in which the ions cannot. The phenomenon of skimmer pulsing is mass dependent and has also exhibited surprisingly non-linear behavior in some cases.
In particular, the linearity of an ion signal seen when pulsing a single gating lens over a wide duty cycle range is not very good at lower duty cycles. This affects fill time linearity on the quardupole trapping instruments and ITC (Total ion current) linearity on Time-of-Flight mass spectrometer instruments.
It has been discovered that this deviation from linearity is caused by ion mobility effects. The gating effect caused by the presence of devices such as a skimmer lens generates an axial electric field that penetrates upstream and causes a mobility dependent depletion of ions when regions of higher pressure exist. This phenomenon is more easily seen when the axial gas velocity is low and ion mobility effects are at their greatest, such as when the orifice diameter of the gating lens is small.
The normal situation is conceptually represented in
This results in the presence of non-linear behavior when the modulation frequency is varied. This manifests itself as a non-linear relationship between intensity counts and the time period in which the stopping potential is applied. With all other things being equal, a linear relationship between intensity and modulation frequency would be expected. This non-linear behavior is observed when the IQ0 lens ID is small. In this case the axial velocity of the ions due to the gas flow will be lower and the effect of the electric field will have a proportionally larger effect on the combined forces (gas flow+electrodynamics) on the ion motion.
It has been found that the ion mobility effects generated by a gating lens can be mitigated by creating a more sharply defined electric gating field by the use of a two or more element gating lens instead of a single flat lens or cone (ie, skimmer) lens.
In various embodiments, only ions downstream of the gating lens on the lower pressure side of the lens will experience the field created when the dual lens is energized. Since the ion mobility properties scale with pressure, lower mobility effects will exist in these lower pressure environments.
The within describe teachings provide a lens providing two functions. The lens separates a high pressure zone where mobility effects dominate from a low pressure zone where electrostatic effects dominate and the lens also can effectively modulate ions.
In various embodiments, the dual lens IQ0 ion optic produces good linearity even for low duty cycles.
In various embodiments, improved fill linearity for ion traps and potentially higher score in identification of compounds in triple-TOF instruments as a result of improved ITC linearity is expected.
In various embodiments, a method for transmitting ions in a mass spectrometer from a region of higher pressure to a region of lower pressure is provided comprising passing the ions through a gating apparatus disposed between said higher pressure region and said lower pressure region, the gating apparatus comprising first and second electrostatic lenses, each of said lenses being operably controlled by one or more controllers capable of maintaining different voltages on each of said lenses, wherein the first lens is disposed adjacent to the region of higher pressure and having a voltage that is fixed at a predetermined value that allows traversal of ions through the first lens, and the second lens is disposed adjacent to the region of lower pressure and being situated downstream from said first lens, said second lens having a voltage that varies between at least two different voltages wherein in the first voltage, the ions can traverse through said second lens and in said second voltage, the ions are preventing from traversing through said second lens.
In various embodiments, a mass spectrometer device is provided which includes an ion guide operating at a first pressure, an ion trap operating at a second pressure that is lower than the first pressure, a gating apparatus disposed between said ion guide and said ion trap for transmitting ions from said ion guide to said ion trap, said gating apparatus comprising a first electrostatic lens and a second electrostatic lens, the first lens being situated adjacent to the ion guide and the second lens being adjacent to said ion trap, at least one controller for operably controlling the voltages on each of the first and second lens separately, wherein the controller is configured to maintain the first lens at a predetermined voltage that allows traversal of ions through said first electrostatic lens and the second lens in at least two different voltages in which at the first voltage, ions can traverse through said second lens and at said second voltage, the ions are preventing from traversing through said second lens.
In various embodiments, a mass spectrometer device is provided which includes an ion guide operating at a first pressure, a Time-of-Flight (TOF) mass spectrometer operating at a second pressure that is lower than the first pressure, a gating apparatus disposed between said ion guide and said TOF mass spectrometer for transmitting ions from said ion guide to said TOF mass spectrometer, said gating apparatus comprising a first electrostatic lens and a second electrostatic lens, the first lens being situated adjacent to the ion guide and the second lens being adjacent to said TOF mass spectrometer, at least one controller for operably controlling the voltages on each of the first and second lens separately, wherein the controller is configured to maintain the first lens at a predetermined voltage that allows traversal of ions through said first electrostatic lens and the second lens in at least two different voltages in which at the first voltage, ions can traverse through said second lens and at said second voltage, the ions are preventing from traversing through said second lens.
In various embodiments, a third electrostatic lens is disposed downstream from the second lens and operates at a predetermined value that allows traversal of ions through the third lens.
In various embodiments, the region of higher pressure is in an atmospheric pressure ion guide.
In various embodiments, the region of lower pressure is in a Q0 stage of a tandem mass spectrometer.
In various embodiments, the region of lower pressure is in a quadrupole ion trap.
In various embodiments, the region of lower pressure is in a TOF mass spectrometer.
In various embodiments, the gating apparatus comprises a third lens disposed downstream from said second lens.
In various embodiments, the voltages on said third and first lenses are the same.
While various embodiments are particularly described below, it would be appreciated that such embodiments have been presented for the purposes of illustration and description. These embodiments are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the claimed inventions to the precise embodiments disclosed. As would be appreciated, modifications and variations are possible in light of the disclosed embodiments or may be acquired from practicing the invention. For example, while embodiments have been specifically disclosed describing a dual lens configuration, it would be appreciated that lens configurations where more than two lens would also benefit from the within described invention and could be similarly utilized and created by the person of ordinary skill. In addition, while the below described benefits are distinctly described with respect to a TOF device, it would be appreciated that such benefits are also derivable from a similar use in a quadrupole trapping device. While in a TOF device, the gating effects used with respect to the present invention are used to primarily avoid oversaturation of the detector with bright ion beams, the use in an ion trap can be used to simulate faster speeds by reducing fill times to a fraction of the normal fill times (For example, reducing fill times from 2 ms, down to 0.05 ms). Such benefits reduce space-charge effects.
It has been found that on the high pressure side, ions are driven by gas flow which results in ion mobility effects and that on the lower pressure side, the ion effects are primarily electrostatic. The modulation of a gating electrode with this configuration creates a localized electric field in a zone of perturbation on either side of the electrode. This electric field causes ions that have high ion mobility properties to be detrimentally affected causing their trajectories to deviate to an unstable trajectory. As ion mobility properties are dependent on the presence of gas, the ion mobility effects in this configuration are more closely felt on the upstream (higher pressure) side of the electrode.
It would be appreciated that while specific embodiments have been disclosed that are a two and three element gates, it would be appreciated by the skilled person that this is only exemplary and that more elements can be utilized without departed from the claimed invention.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 61/922,301, filed Dec. 31, 2013, the content of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2014/002792 | 12/12/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2015/101823 | 7/9/2015 | WO | A |
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