The present application claims priority from Japanese Application JP 2003-339157 filed on Sep. 30, 2003, the content of which is hereby incorporated by reference into this application.
The present invention relates to a mass spectrometer for judging the presence or absence of an aimed chemical substance and more particularly to a dangerous material detection apparatus for detecting dangerous materials such as explosives or drugs.
Along with worsening international conflictions, detection apparatus for detecting explosives have been demanded for preventing terrorism or keeping security. As the detection apparatus, security check apparatus using X-ray transmission have been used generally including airports. X-ray detection apparatus recognize a target as a lump and judge a dangerous target based on the information for the shape and the like thereof and this is referred to as bulk detection. On the other hand, a detection method based on gas analysis is referred to as trace detection, which identifies the substance based on the information of chemical analysis. The trace detection has a feature capable of detecting a trace amount of ingredients deposited on a bag, etc. In view of the a social demand for strict security check, it has been demanded for an apparatus in combination of bulk detection and trace detection thereby capable of detecting dangerous target at a higher accuracy.
On the other hand, for finding illicit drugs carried on various routes, the detection apparatus are used, for example, also in the custom office or the like. While the bulk detection apparatus and drug detecting dogs are mainly used in the custom offices, it has been keenly demanded for a trace analysis apparatus for use in absolute drugs instead of drug-sniffing dogs.
For trace detection, various analysis methods such as ion mobility spectroscopy and gas chromatography have been attempted. Research and development have been under progress for the apparatus having high speed, sensitivity together and selectivity which are important for the detection apparatus.
In view of the situations described above, since mass spectroscopy is basically excellent in the speed, the sensitivity and the selectivity, a detection technique based, for example, on the mass spectroscopy has been proposed (refer to Patent Document 1 (JP-A No. 134970/1995): prior art 1).
The data processing section 18 judges plural m/z (ion mass number/ion valence number) values showing a specified chemical and judges whether the specified chemical is contained or not in a gas to be tested. The data processing section 18 comprises a mass judging section 101, a chemical A judging section 102, a chemical B judging section 103, a chemical C judging section 104 and an alarm driving section 105. Further, display sections 106, 107 and 108 are disposed to an alarm display section 19 driven by the alarm driving section 105.
Further, for monitoring chemical substances, it has been known a method of conducting tandem mass analysis simultaneously in case where plural species of molecules to be measured present (refer to Patent Document 2 (JP-A No. 162189/2000): prior art 2).
Further, in a method of leaving aimed ions in the inside of an ion trap mass spectrometer while discharging other ions, a method of applying a signal having different amplitudes depending on frequencies between end gap electrodes has been known (refer to Patent Document 3 (U.S. Pat. No. 5,654,542): prior art 3).
Further, it has been known a method of deflecting and converging ions by a double cylindrical deflector comprising an inner cylindrical electrode and an outer cylindrical electrode (refer to Patent Document 4 (JP-A No. 85834/1995): prior art 4).
Further, a mass analysis method using filtered noise fields has also been known (refer to Patent Document 5 (U.S. Pat. No. 5,206,507): prior art 5).
The detection apparatus described in the prior art 1 involves the following problems. In the detection apparatus described in the prior art 1, a drug is judged by using an m/z value of an ion generated from the ion source. Accordingly, in a case where a chemical substance generating an ion having an identical m/z value with that of the chemical as a target of detection is present, it has a high possibility of causing erroneous information of indicating alarm irrespective of the absence of the drug to be detected.
More specifically, during detection of a stimulant drug in a luggage, the apparatus reacts to the components of cosmetics contained in the luggage to generate erroneous information. This is attributable to that the selectivity of the mass spectrometric section for analyzing ions is low and it cannot distinguish the ion derived from the stimulant and the ion derived from the cosmetics that incidentally has an identical m/z value.
As method of enhancing the selectivity in the mass spectrometer, a tandem mass analysis method has been known, a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer or a quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer has been used for an apparatus to practice the tandem mass analysis. In the tandem mass analysis method, the following steps (1) to (4) have usually been used.
(1) First Step Mass Analysis:
Mass analysis is conducted to measure m/z for ions generated from an ion source.
(2) Selection:
An ion having a specified m/z value is selected from the ions having various m/z.
(3) Dissociation:
Selected ion (precursor ion) is dissociated by collision with a neutral gas or the like to generate an ion decomposition product (fragment ion).
(4) Second Step Mass Analysis:
In a case where the precursor ion is dissociated, it depends on the strength of chemical bonds of each site. Accordingly, when the fragment ion is analyzed, a mass spectrum highly abound in molecular structure information of the precursor ion is obtained. Accordingly, even when the ions generated from the ion source incidentally have identical m/z, the target to be detected can be distinguished by checking the mass spectrum of the fragment ions and it can be judged more exactly where the target to be inspected is contained or not.
Accordingly, in the detection apparatus of the prior art 1 shown in
With the reasons described above, it has been demanded for a detection apparatus having both high selectivity and high detection speed.
In the tandem mass analysis, when the technique described in the prior art 2 of dissociating plural ions simultaneously is applied, it can be expected for the development of a detection apparatus having both high selectivity and high detection speed but it brings about the following problems.
For example, in a case of detecting explosives, chemical properties of explosives as the target for detection, for example, easiness of dissociation and molecular weight are versatile. Then, more deliberate care is necessary compared with a case of simultaneously measuring only the targets having easiness of dissociation and molecular weight such as chrolophenols and dioxines. For example, when plural explosives are dissociated under identical conditions, since the efficiency of the dissociation changes greatly on every explosives, it results in a problem that a specific explosive cannot be detected effectively.
Further, for obtaining good detection result with less erroneous information, it is necessary to finely set the amplitude of a high frequency applied to the end gap also in a case of selecting plural ions. This is because some explosives are dissociated already in the course of selection. A device as described in the prior art 3 of applying a greater amplitude for a lower frequency was not yet sufficient.
The present invention intends to provide a mass spectrometer capable of conducting analysis at high speed and high accuracy, as well as an dangerous material detecting apparatus using the same.
According to the present invention, plural precursor ions are selected, and the selected plural precursor ions are dissociated all at once under suitable conditions. In the invention, when tandem mass analysis is conducted for once to plural ions at the same time, high speed and accurate detection is enabled by providing a condition suitable to the detection of the dangerous material.
The mass spectrometer according to the invention comprises a sample introduction section for introducing a sample, an ion source for ionizing the sample introduced from the sample introduction section, an ion trap mass spectrometer for mass spectrometry of ions generated from the ion source, and a data processing device having a data base for chemical substances and judging the presence or absence of an aimed chemical substance based on the mass spectral information obtained by the mass spectrometer. The data base for chemical substances contains mass spectra.
The mass spectrometer according to the invention comprises a device for applying a high frequency signal not containing resonance frequencies for plural precursor ions but containing resonance frequencies of other ions, and having different amplitudes on every frequencies to an electrode constituting the mass spectrometer thereby controlling the selection for the plural precursor ions, and
a device for applying a high frequency signal having amplitudes set individually on every resonance frequencies of the plural precursor ions and superimposed with the resonance frequencies for the plural precursor ions to the electrode constituting the mass spectrometer thereby controlling the dissociation of the plural precursor ions (first constitution). Other ions mean, hereinafter, ions other than the plural precursor ions (selected ions). The electrode constituting the mass spectrometer includes a ring electrode and endcap electrodes sandwiching the same.
The mass spectrometer according to the invention comprises a device for applying a high frequency signal not containing resonance frequencies for plural precursor ions but containing resonance frequencies of other ions, and having different amplitudes on every frequencies to an electrode constituting the mass spectrometer thereby controlling the selection for the plural precursor ions, and
a device for applying a high frequency signal superimposed with the resonance frequencies for the plural precursor ions to the electrode constituting the mass spectrometer thereby controlling the dissociation of the plural precursor ions (second constitution).
The mass spectrometer according to the invention comprises a device for applying a high frequency signal not containing resonance frequencies for plural precursor ions but containing resonance frequencies of other ions to an electrode constituting the mass spectrometer thereby controlling the selection for the plural precursor ions, and
a device for applying a high frequency signal having amplitudes set individually on every resonance frequencies of the plural precursor ions and superimposed with the resonance frequencies for the plural precursor ions to the electrode constituting the mass spectrometer thereby controlling the dissociation of the plural precursor ions (third constitution).
The mass spectrometer according to the invention comprises a device for applying a high frequency signal not containing resonance frequencies for plural precursor ions but containing resonance frequencies of other ions to an electrode constituting the mass spectrometer thereby controlling the selection for the plural precursor ions, and
a device for applying a high frequency signal superimposed with the resonance frequencies for the plural precursor ions to the electrode constituting the mass spectrometer thereby controlling the dissociation of the plural precursor ions (fourth constitution).
The mass spectrometer according to the invention comprises a device for applying a high frequency signal not containing resonance frequencies for plural precursor ions but containing resonance frequencies of other ions thereby controlling the selection for the plural precursor ions, and
a device for applying a high frequency signal superimposed with the resonance frequencies for the plural precursor ions to the electrode constituting the mass spectrometer thereby controlling the dissociation of the plural precursor ions, and means for switching previously registered plural analyzing conditions sequentially to conduct measurement (fifth constitution).
The mass spectrometer according to the first to fifth constitutions of the invention is based on the identical basic principle of mass spectroscopy of selecting plural precursor ions, obtaining mass spectra of plural fragment ions obtained by dissociating the selected plural precursor ions at the same time and judging the presence or absence of the aimed chemical substance based on the mass spectra of the obtained plural fragment ions.
The dangerous material detection apparatus according to the invention has a feature in detecting dangerous materials such as explosives and absolute drugs by using the mass spectrometer having any of the first to fifth constitutions of the invention described above.
The method of detecting dangerous materials according to the invention comprises a step of ionizing a sample, a selection step of applying a high frequency signal not containing resonance frequencies for plural precursor ions but containing resonance frequencies for other ions to an electrode constituting an ion trap mass spectrometer, thereby selecting the plural precursor ions, a dissociation step of applying a high frequency signal superimposed with resonance frequencies for the plural precursor ions to an electrode constituting the mass spectrometer thereby dissociating the plural precursors, a measuring step of measuring the mass spectra of the plural fragment ions generated by the dissociation of the plural precursor ions by the ion trap mass spectrometer, and a judging step of judging the absence or presence of an aimed chemical substance contained in the sample based on the comparison between the data base for the chemical substances containing the mass spectra and the mass spectra of the obtained plural fragment ions.
Further, the dangerous material detection method according to the invention has the following features.
The invention can provide a mass spectrometer capable of analysis at high speed and at high accuracy, and a dangerous material detection apparatus and a dangerous material detection method using the same. According to the invention, the detection speed can be shortened while keeping the high selectivity of the tandem mass analysis as it is, thereby enabling for detection at high speed and high accuracy.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will be described in details based on the drawings, wherein
A preferred embodiment of the present invention is to be described in details with reference to the drawings.
An ion source 20 is connected with a gas introduction tube 21, and exhaust tubes 22a and 22b. A gas from a sample gas collection port is sucked by a pump connected to the exhaust tubes 22a and 22b and introduced by way of the gas introduction tube 21 into the ion source 20. Ingredients contained in the gas introduced into the ion source 20 are partially ionized.
Ions generated from the ion source 20 and the gas introduced into the ion source are partially taken by way of a first aperture 23, a second aperture 24 and a third aperture 25 into a vacuum section 27 evacuated by a vacuum pump 26. Each of the apertures has a diameter of about 0.3 mm. The electrode in which the aperture is opened is heated to about 100° C. to 300° C. by a heater (not illustrated). The gas not taken from the first aperture 23 is exhausted by way of the exhaust tubes 22a and 22b to the outside of the apparatus by way of the pump.
Differential exhaust portion 28 (29) is defined between the electrodes in which the apertures 23, 24 and 25 are opened and evacuated by a general suction pump 30. While a rotary pump, a scroll pump or a mechanical booster pump is usually used for the general suction pump 30, a turbo-molecule pump can also be used for the evacuation of this region. Further, a voltage can be applied to the electrodes in which the apertures 23, 24 and 25 are opened and improves the ion transmittance and, at the same time, cluster ions generated by adiabatic expansion are cleaved by collision with remaining molecules.
In
The generated ions, after passing through the third aperture 25, are converged by a convergent lens 31. Einzel lens usually comprises three electrodes, etc. are used for the convergent lens 31. Ions further pass through a slit electrode 32. It is structurally adapted such that ions passing through the third aperture 25 are converged through the convergent lens 31 to the opening of the slit electrode 32 and passed therethrough but not convergent neutral particles, etc. collide against the slit portion and do not easily reach the mass analysis section. Ions after passing through the slit electrode 32 are deflected and converged by a double cylindrical deflector 35 comprising an inner cylindrical electrode 33 and an outer cylindrical electrode 34 having a number of openings. In the double cylindrical deflector 35, the ions are deflected and converged by using electric fields from the outer cylindrical electrode exuding through the openings of the inner cylindrical electrode. Details of the double cylindrical deflector are described in the prior art 4.
Ions after passing through the double cylindrical deflector 35 are introduced into an ion trap mass spectrometer constituted with a ring electrode 36 and endcap electrodes 37a and 37b. A gate electrode 38 is provided for controlling the incident timing of ions to the mass spectrometer. Flange electrodes 39a and 39b are provided in order to prevent the ions from reaching quartz rings 40a and 40b for holding the ring electrode 36 and the endcap electrodes 37a and 37b thereby charging the quartz rings 40a and 40b.
Helium is supplied to the inside of the ion trap mass spectrometer from a helium gas supply tube, not shown, and kept at a pressure of about 10−3 Torr (0.133322 Pa). The ion trap mass spectrometer is controlled by a mass spectrometer control section (not illustrated). Ions introduced into the mass spectrometer collide against the helium gas to loss the energy and trapped by an alternating electric field. The trapped ions are exhausted out of the ion trap mass spectrometer according to m/z of the ion by the scanning of a high frequency voltage applied to the ring electrode 36 and the endcap electrodes 37a and 37b and then detected by way of an ion take out lens 41 by a detector 42. The detected signal is amplified through an amplifier 43 and then processed by a data processing device 44.
Since the ion trap mass spectrometer has such a characteristic of trapping the ions at the inside thereof (in a space surrounded by the ring electrode 36 and the endcap electrodes 37a and 37b), trapped ions can be detected by taking the ion introduction time longer, even in a case where the concentration of the substances to be detected and the amount of generated ions is small. Accordingly, even in a case where the concentration of the sample is low, ions can be concentrated at a high ratio in the ion trap mass spectrometer and the pretreatment (such as condensation) of the sample can be simplified extremely.
A gas introduced through the sample gas introduction tube 21 is once introduced to an ion drift section 45. The ion drift section 45 is at a substantially atmospheric pressure. A portion of the sample gas introduced into the ion drift section 45 is introduced into a corona discharging section 46, while the remaining gas is exhausted through the exhaust tube 22b. The sample gas introduced to the corona discharging section 46 is introduced to a corona discharging region 48 formed near the top end of a needle electrode 47 and ionized by applying a high voltage to needle electrode.
In this case, in the corona discharging region 48, the sample gas is introduced in the direction substantially opposed to the flow of the ions drifting from the needle electrode 47 to the counter electrode 49. The generated ions are introduced under the electric fields through the opening 50 of the counter electrode 49 to the ion drifting section 45. Then, the ions can be drifted and introduced efficiently to the first aperture 23 by applying a voltage between the counter electrode 49 and the electrode in which the first aperture 23 is opened. The ions introduced from the first aperture 23 are introduced through the second aperture 23 and the third aperture 25 into the vacuum section 27.
The flow rate of the gas flowing into the corona discharge section 46 is important for highly sensitive and stable detection. Accordingly, the exhaust tube 22a is preferably provided with a flow control section 51. Further, with a view point of preventing adsorption of the sample, the drifting section 45, the corona discharging section 46, the gas introduction pipe 21, etc. are preferably heated by a heater, not shown. While the flow rate of the gas passing through the gas introduction tube 21 and the exhaust tube 22b can be decided by the capacity of the suction pump 52 such as a diaphragm pump and the conductance of the pipeline, a control device like a flow control section 51 shown in
Then, the operation of the ion trap mass spectrometer is to be described in details. The ion trap mass spectrometer is constituted with endcap electrodes and a ring electrode.
At first, in an ion accumulation section 202, a high frequency voltage is applied to the ring electrode to form a potential for confining ions in a space surrounded with the ring electrode and the endcap electrodes. Further, a voltage is applied to the gate electrode is controlled such that the ions are introduced passing through the gate electrode into the mass spectrometer. The ions are incident from the opening in the endcap electrodes and trapped by the potential.
In the ion selection section 203, among various ions confined in the ion accumulation section 202, those ions having predetermined plural m/z are remained and other ions are discharges.
In the ion dissociation section 204, energy is given to the ions having plural m/z selected by the ion selection section 203, they are collided, for example, against a helium gas in the gas spectrometer to generate fragment ions. For giving the energy to the ions, a high frequency voltage is applied between the endcap electrodes to accelerate the ions in the mass spectrometer. The accelerated ions collide against the gas such as helium where a portion of the kinetic energy of the ions is converted to the internal energy of the ions, and internal energy is accumulated during repetitive collision and those portions with weak chemical bond in the ions are cleaved to cause dissociation.
In the mass analysis section 205, when the amplitude of the high frequency voltage applied to the ring electrode is increased gradually, orbits of the ions become instable sequentially from those with smaller values obtained by dividing the mass of ion with static charge of ion (hereinafter referred to as m/z) and they are exhausted through the opening formed in the endcap electrodes to the outside of the mass analysis section. The exhausted ions are detected by an ion detector.
After completion of the mass analysis section 205, the voltage applied to the ring electrode is removed and the ion confining potential is eliminated thereby removing ions remaining in the mass analysis section (remaining ion removal section 201). The series of operations described above are repeated.
Then, the ion selection method in the ion selection section 203 is to be described. While various methods can be adopted for discharging unnecessary ions and description is to be made to the method of using filtered noise fields (hereinafter referred to as FNF) described in the prior art 5. Ions accumulated in the ion trap mass spectrometer have inherent frequencies in accordance with m/z thereof. Accordingly, ions having specified m/z can be resonated and accelerated by applying the inherent frequency between the endcaps. The ions can be discharged selectively by controlling the amplitude applied to the endcaps. On the contrary, when a voltage having all frequency components (white noise) is applied between the endcaps, all the ions can be discharged in principle.
Then, when a noise not containing specific frequency components but containing other frequency components than described above (FNF) is applied between the endcap electrodes, it is possible to remain the ions having corresponding inherent frequency, that is, ions having specific m/z in the ion trap mass spectrometer and discharge other ions than described above.
In this case, the amplitude of the frequency to be applied is controlled on every frequencies in accordance with the physical property of the substance to be detected (easiness of dissociation, molecular weight, etc). At first, the easiness discharge differs depending on the mass of ion (exactly, a value obtained by dividing the mass with the static charge (m/z)), and a signal of a greater amplitude has to be applied for discharging more heavy ions. There exists a correlation between the mass and the resonance frequency of an ion and a heavier ion has lower resonance frequency. In view of the above, it is basically preferred to apply a signal of a greater amplitude as the frequency is lower.
Further, since the ion collides against a gas such as of helium in the mass analysis section, a deviation is caused from its original orbit. Thus, the resonance frequency inevitably has a variation to some extent. That is, the ion tends to be accelerated somewhat even at a frequency with a slight deviation. Although this provides no problem in usual chemical substances, a highly decomposing substance such as molecules of explosives may possibly collide to cause dissociation even when it is accelerated slightly. Accordingly, it is preferred to decrease the amplitude of the frequency as it approaches to the resonance frequency (f1, f2, f3).
Further, as shown at f2 and f3 in
Then, after remaining the ions having plural m/z in the mass spectrometer, the remaining ions are then dissociated simultaneously. In the ion dissociation section 204, energy is given to the ions having selected m/z in the ion selection section, colliding the ions against the helium gas or the like in the mass spectrometer, to generate fragment ions.
The amplitude suitable to the dissociation differs depending on the substance to be detected. For example, since a certain kind of explosives is highly dissociative, it may be sometimes disintegrated failing to obtain a fragment ion inherent to the compound when an amplitude at the some extent as that for other substances is given. Then, as shown in
The amplitude suitable on every frequencies shown in
(a) in
At first, (a) in
At first, (b) in
(c) in
(d) in
(e) in
(f) in
As described above, the ion derived from TNT and the ion derived from RDX can be detected by the tandem mass analysis simultaneously, and when the signal of the fragment ion is judged and a signal is obtained at m/z=210, it may be judged that TNT has been detected and when a signal is obtained at m/z=46 or 92, it may be judged that RDX has been detected.
In a case of conducting the tandem mass analysis by the ion trap mass spectrometer, it usually takes 50 ms for the ion accumulation section, 20 ms for the ion selection section, 20 ms for the ion dissociation section, 50 ms for the mass analysis section and about 30 ms for the residual ion removal section, that is, about 0.2 sec of time is necessary for the measurement for once. In the existent tandem mass analysis, since one precursor ion is selected and dissociated, only one target could be detected in the measurement for once. Therefore, assuming the number of the kinds of explosives to be detected as 20, it requires about four sec of time and rapid detection was not possible. According to the invention, since the tandem mass analysis is conducted after selecting the plural precursor ions, the detection time can be shortened drastically while keeping high selectivity as it is.
In a case of detecting explosives or illicit drugs, even different substances may sometimes forms an identical fragment ion when tandem mass analysis is conducted. For example, while explosives often comprise nitro compounds, NO2− and NO3− derived from the decomposition of the nitro group are sometimes observed as fragment ions depending on the substance.
In such a case, it is not advantageous to conducted tandem mass analysis for A and B, simultaneously and detection at higher accuracy is possible by separating measurement into a case of applying tandem mass analysis for plural targets including the substance A (measurement 1) and a case of applying tandem mass analysis for plural targets including the substance B (measurement 2) and conducting the analysis alternately.
Referring more specifically, the fragment ions of PETN as a sort of explosives include m/z=62 and the like, and the fragment ions having m/z=62 can be obtained also from other explosives, for example, nitroglycerine. Accordingly, when the tandem mass analysis is conducted to PETN and nitroglycerine simultaneously and detection is conducted based on the presence or absence of the fragment ion at m/z=62, it is difficult to distinguish a signal, when it is obtained, whether this is a signal derived from PETN or a signal derived from nitroglycerine. In a case where it is intended to judge as far as the kind of the explosives, it is preferred not to conduct the tandem mass analysis for PETN and nitroglycerine simultaneously but to conduct measurement separately or to measure the fragment ion inherent to each of the explosives as the target for measurement.
Further, in a case where the number of substances to be detected is increased and the relation between the precursor ion and the fragment ion becomes more complicated, three or more measuring conditions may be set previously and measurement may be conducted sequentially. For example, in a case where there are 20 kinds of targets to be detected measurement may be separated into measurement 1, measurement 2 and measurement 3 each for 7 to 8 ingredients and they may be measured sequentially such that the fragment ions are not overlapped based on the result of previous study. Assuming the time necessary for measurement for once as 0.2 sec, since the time necessary for conducting three steps of measurement is about 0.6 sec, a number of ingredients can be checked in a short period of time.
The present invention can be utilized to the improvement of security check in important facilities, for example, in airports.
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