The present invention relates generally to ion trap mass spectrometers, and more particularly to methods for operating an ion trap mass spectrometer to optimize peak positions and peak characteristics.
Ion trap mass analyzers have been described extensively in the literature (see, e.g., March et al., “Quadrupole Ion Trap Mass Spectrometry”, John Wiley & Sons (2005)) and are widely used for mass spectrometric analysis of a variety of substances, including small molecules such as pharmaceutical agents and their metabolites, as well as large biomolecules such as peptides and proteins. Mass analysis is commonly performed in ion traps by the mass-selective resonance ejection method, which has been widely practiced since the late 1980's (e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 4,736,101, titled “Method of operating ion trap detector in MS/MS mode”). In this method, ions of various mass are brought sequentially into resonance with a weak supplementary dipolar AC resonant ejection voltage, Vreseject. Ions in the trap oscillate with a frequency that depends on the amplitude of the main radio-frequency (RF) trapping voltage VRF. Typically, in the resonance ejection method, after application of the resonance ejection voltage, Vreseject, masses are then brought sequentially into resonance by ramping the trapping voltage amplitude, VRF, thereby causing the ions to be ejected from the ion trap to the detector(s) in order of their masses (or mass-to-charge ratios—m/z's). If VRF is varied at a constant rate, then the derivative of mass of ejected ions with respect to time at a particular frequency is nominally constant, and ions of successive mass will be ejected at constant time intervals, i.e. the mass scale will be linear.
In practice, the mass scale of resonantly ejected ions is only approximately linear with respect to VRF when an ion trap is operated as described above. The deviations from linearity are especially pronounced at high rates of scanning VRF. Since scanning an ion trap at very fast rates with good mass accuracy is a desirable goal, an improved means of operating the trap or correcting the data post-acquisition is required.
Moreover, one is often principally concerned, in terms of choosing resonant ejection voltage amplitude, with ejecting ion packets having optimal peak characteristics (e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 7,804,065, titled “Methods of calibrating and operating an ion trap mass analyzer to optimize mass spectral peak characteristics” in the names of inventors Remes et al., incorporated herein by reference in its entirety), and then subsequently linearizing the mass scale. Thus, an additional instrument metric of interest is the set of characteristics which comprise a well-formed peak (U.S. Pat. No. 7,804,065). That is to say, the resonant ejection voltage should be scanned with mass in a way that optimizes the shape of the peak. As used herein, peak quality is a value calculated from one or more peak characteristics such as peak height, width, inter-peak valley depth, peak symmetry, spacing of related peaks representing an isotopic distribution and peak position and is representative of the ability of the peak to provide meaningful and accurate qualitative and/or quantitative information regarding the associated ion. The peak quality may be calculated from a set of equations stored in the memory of a control and data system. The peak quality may be calculated in a different fashion for each scan rate.
It is known that the characteristics and quality of a mass spectral peak acquired by resonant ejection will vary with the amplitude of the resonant ejection voltage, and that the amplitude that optimizes certain peak characteristics depends on the m/z of the ejected ion. The prior art contains a number of references that describe methods for varying the resonant ejection voltage amplitude during an analytical scan in order to produce high quality mass spectral peaks across the measured range of m/z's. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,298,746 to Franzen et al. (“Method and Device for Control of the Excitation Voltage for Ion Ejection from Ion trap Mass Spectrometers”) prescribes controlling the resonant ejection voltage during the analytical scan such that its amplitude is set proportionally to the square root of the main RF trapping voltage amplitude. In another example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,572,025 to Cotter et al. discloses operating an ion trap to maintain a constant ratio between the RF trapping voltage and resonant ejection voltage amplitudes. As another example, the instant inventors, in the aforementioned U.S. Pat. No. 7,804,065, described a method for calibrating an ion trap mass spectrometer including steps of: selecting a phase of the resonant ejection voltage that optimizes a peak quality representative of one or more mass spectral peak characteristics; identifying, for each of a plurality of calibrant ions having different m/z's, a resonant ejection voltage amplitude that optimizes the peak quality when the ion trap is operated at the selected phase; and, deriving a relationship between m/z and resonant ejection voltage amplitude based on the optimized resonant ejection voltage amplitude identified for the plurality of calibrant ions.
Many commercially available ion trap mass spectrometers utilize a calibration procedure in which the resonant ejection voltage amplitude that optimizes one or more peak characteristics (e.g., peak width) is experimentally determined for each of several calibrant ions having different m/z's, and an amplitude calibration is developed by fitting a line to the several (m/z, amplitude) points. Conventionally, it is considered that, to a first approximation, the optimal resonant ejection voltage should be linear with mass, so that ions of each mass have identical rates of approaching the resonance frequency. In practice, however, deviations from linearity are observed, especially at high scan rates. Thus, deviations from linearity are observed not only in the form of the mass dependency of the optimal resonance ejection voltage, but also in the form of the mass dependency of the scanned trapping voltage. Thus, the methods of calibrating and operating the ion trap should also take into account such deviations from linearity of applied voltages, especially as they relate to different scanning rates.
Disclosed herein are methods of calibrating the main and supplementary RF voltages of ion trap mass spectrometers to maintain mass accuracy and a high degree of peak quality at a variety of scanning rates, including fast scanning rates. It is found that the variation, with mass, of the main and supplementary RF voltages is not completely linear, as is conventionally predicted by the Mathieu equation and a driven harmonic oscillator model, respectively. In particular, significant deviations are observed at faster scan rates. The methods and apparatus taught herein include taking into account the effects of the initial average positions, within the trap, of ions of different mass-to-charge ratios in order to calibrate mass axes while simultaneously providing well-formed peaks at a variety of mass scanning rates.
Accordingly, in a first aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of calibrating an ion trap mass analyzer having a plurality of electrodes to which a main RF trapping voltage and a resonant ejection voltage are applied during operation of the ion trap mass analyzer, the method comprising steps of: (a) selecting an analytical scan rate at which to operate the mass spectrometer; (b) identifying, for each of a plurality of ion types produced from at least one calibrant material and having respective mass-to-charge ratios, an optimum resonant ejection voltage amplitude at which a mass peak quality value is optimized when the ion trap mass analyzer is operated at the selected scan rate, the mass peak quality value representative of one or more mass peak characteristics observed during operation of the ion trap mass analyzer; (c) determining a best-fit function from the identified optimum resonant ejection voltage amplitudes and the mass-to-charge ratios, the best-fit function of the form Vreseject=mc(a+bm), where Vreseject is a variable representing resonant ejection voltage amplitude, m is a variable representing mass-to-charge ratio, and a and b and c are constants determined by a fitting procedure, where c≈0.5, for instance, 0.40≦c≦0.60; and (d) storing information representing the best-fit function derived in step (c). Various embodiments may further comprise the steps of: (e) identifying, for each of a plurality of ion types having respective mass-to-charge ratios, a respective trapping voltage amplitude at which ions of each said ion type are ejected from the ion trap mass analyzer when the ion trap mass analyzer is operated at the selected scan rate and employing a resonant ejection voltage calculated according to the information stored in step (d); (f) determining a second best-fit function from the identified trapping voltage amplitudes and the mass-to-charge ratios of the plurality of ion types employed in step (e), the second best-fit function being of a form that yields an RF trapping voltage amplitude that is required to eject an ion having mass-to-charge ratio, m, from the ion trap mass analyzer; and (g) storing information representing the second best-fit function derived in step (f).
In a second aspect of the invention, there is provided an ion trap mass spectrometer, comprising: (i) a plurality of electrodes defining an interior volume for receiving and trapping ions; (ii) a main RF trapping voltage source for applying an RF trapping voltage to at least a portion of the plurality of electrodes; (iii) a resonant ejection voltage source for applying a resonant ejection voltage to at least a portion of the plurality of electrodes; and (iv) a controller, coupled to the RF trapping voltage and the resonant ejection voltage source, configured to perform steps of: (a) setting an analytical scan rate at which to operate the mass spectrometer; (b) identifying, for each of a plurality of ion types produced from at least one calibrant material and having respective mass-to-charge ratios, an optimum resonant ejection voltage amplitude at which a mass peak quality value is optimized when the ion trap mass analyzer is operated at the selected scan rate, the mass peak quality value representative of one or more mass peak characteristics observed during operation of the ion trap mass analyzer; (c) determining a best-fit function from the identified optimum resonant ejection voltage amplitudes and the mass-to-charge ratios, the best-fit function of the form Vreseject=mc(a+bm), where Vreseject is a variable representing resonant ejection voltage amplitude, m is a variable representing mass-to-charge ratio and a, b and c are constants determined by a fitting procedure, where c≈0.5, for instance, 0.40≦c≦0.60; and (d) storing information representing the best-fit function derived in step (c). The controller may be further configured to perform the further steps of: (e) identifying, for each of a plurality of ion types produced from at least one calibrant material and having respective mass-to-charge ratios, a respective RF voltage amplitude at which ions of each said ion type are ejected from the ion trap mass analyzer when the ion trap mass analyzer is operated at the selected scan rate and employing a resonant ejection voltage calculated according to the information stored in step (d); (f) determining a second best-fit function from the identified RF voltage amplitudes and the mass-to-charge ratios of the plurality of ion types employed in step (e), the second best-fit function being of a form that yields an RF voltage amplitude that is required to eject an ion having mass-to-charge ratio, m, from the ion trap mass analyzer; and (g) storing information representing the second best-fit function derived in step (f).
In yet another aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of calibrating and operating an ion trap mass spectrometer having a plurality of electrodes to which a main RF trapping voltage and a resonant ejection voltage are applied during operation of the ion trap mass analyzer, the method comprising the steps of: (a) identifying, for each of a plurality of ion types produced from at least one calibrant material and having respective mass-to-charge ratios, a respective trapping voltage amplitude at which ions of each ion type of the plurality of ion types are ejected from the ion trap mass analyzer when the ion trap mass analyzer is operated at a selected scan rate and employing a pre-determined resonant ejection voltage profile; (b) determining a best-fit function from the identified trapping voltage amplitudes and the mass-to-charge ratios of the plurality of ion types, the best-fit function having a form chosen from the group consisting of
and VRF(m)=am+b+p exp(rm) where a, b, p, q and r are constants determined by a fitting procedure, and VRF(m) is an applied RF trapping voltage amplitude that is required to eject an ion having mass-to-charge ratio, m, from the ion trap mass analyzer when the ion trap mass analyzer is operated at the selected scan rate and employing the pre-determined resonant ejection voltage profile; and operating the ion trap mass analyzer at the selected scan rate to analyze a sample employing the best-fit function determined in step (b) to relate applied trapping voltage to mass-to-charge ratio of detected sample ions. A mass scan of the ion trap analyzer to analyze a sample may be performed using a trapping voltage amplitude that varies non-linearly in time such that the mass-to-charge ratio of detected ions varies linearly in time in accordance with the best-fit function determined in step (b). Alternatively, the operation of the ion trap mass spectrometer may comprise performing a mass scan of the ion trap mass analyzer to analyze a sample using a trapping voltage amplitude that varies linearly in time; and calculating mass-to-charge ratios of sample ions detected during the mass scan using the best-fit function determined in step (b).
Methods or steps in accordance with the invention may be automatically initiated either at prescribed intervals or on the occurrence of prescribed events. A second analytical scan rate may be selected after which either steps (b)-(d) or (b)-(g) are repeated using the second selected analytical scan rate. In various embodiments, the step (b) may comprise: (b1) acquiring a plurality of mass spectra of a selected calibrant material such that the ion trap mass analyzer is operated at the selected scan rate, wherein each of the mass spectra corresponds to operation of the ion trap mass analyzer at a different respective Vreseject value; and (b2) calculating, for each of the plurality of acquired mass spectra, a mass peak-quality value derived from one or more peak characteristics chosen from the group consisting of peak height, peak width, inter-peak valley depth, peak symmetry, spacing of related peaks representing an isotopic distribution and peak position. In some embodiments, a portion of the ions used for calibration may comprise precursor ions, while another portion of the ions may be fragment ions produced by fragmentation of the precursor ions.
In various embodiments, the step (f) of determining the second best-fit function may be performed such that said function does not have a constant first derivative over a full scanning range of the ion trap mass analyzer. In some embodiments, the second best-fit function may be of a form such as
or, alternatively,
or, alternatively, VRF(m)=am+b+p exp(rm), where a, b, p, q and r are constants determined by a second fitting procedure, and VRF(m) is an applied RF trapping voltage amplitude that is required to eject an ion having mass-to-charge ratio, m, when an ion trap is operated at the selected scan rate. In various other embodiments, the second best-fit function may comprise a piecewise linear function. In various embodiments, the step (f) may comprise: (f1) acquiring a plurality of mass spectra of a first set of ions of selected ion types by scanning the trapping voltage amplitude while operating the ion trap mass analyzer at the selected scan rate and employing resonant ejection voltages calculated according to the information stored in step (d); (f2) determining an approximate fit function using results obtained in step (f1), the approximate fit function being of a form that yields an approximate applied RF trapping voltage amplitude that is required to eject an ion having mass-to-charge ratio, m, from the ion trap mass analyzer; (f3) acquiring a plurality of mass spectra of a second set of ions of the selected ion types by scanning the trapping voltage amplitude while operating the ion trap mass analyzer at the selected scan rate, employing resonant ejection voltages calculated according to the information stored in step (d) and employing the approximate fit function calculated in step (f2); and (f4) calculating the second best-fit function using results obtained in step (f3).
In still yet another aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of calibrating the mass-axis scale of an ion trap mass spectrometer comprising the steps of: (a) identifying, for each of a plurality of ion types produced from at least one calibrant material and having respective mass-to-charge ratios, a trapping voltage amplitude at which ions of each respective ion type are ejected, by resonance ejection, from the ion trap mass analyzer when the ion trap mass analyzer is operated at a selected scan rate; (b) determining a best-fit function from the identified trapping voltage amplitudes and the mass-to-charge ratios of the plurality of ions, the best-fit function yielding an RF trapping voltage amplitude, VRF(m), that is required to eject an ion having mass-to-charge ratio, m, from the ion trap mass spectrometer operated at the selected scan rate; wherein said best-fit function does not have a constant first derivative over a full scanning range of the ion trap mass spectrometer; and (c) storing information representing the best-fit function derived in step (b).
The above noted and various other aspects of the present invention will become apparent from the following description which is given by way of example only and with reference to the accompanying drawings, not necessarily drawn to scale, in which:
The present invention provides improved methods for calibrating ion trap mass spectrometers. The following description is presented to enable any person skilled in the art to make and use the invention, and is provided in the context of a particular application and its requirements. Various modifications to the described embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art and the generic principles herein may be applied to other embodiments. Thus, the present invention is not intended to be limited to the embodiments and examples shown but is to be accorded the widest possible scope in accordance with the features and principles shown and described. It is to be noted that, throughout this entire disclosure, the terms mass and mass-to-charge will be used interchangeably, as is common practice. Accordingly, the mathematical symbol for mass, m, is used interchangeably with the symbolism for mass-to-charge ratio, m/z. It should also be noted that the term voltage and the corresponding symbol, V, with or without an identifying subscript, refers to a voltage amplitude such as a peak voltage or root-mean-square voltage of an oscillatory RF or AC electric field. The particular features and advantages of the invention will become more apparent with reference to the appended
In practice, the mass scale of resonantly ejected ions is only approximately linear with respect to VRF when an ion trap is operated as described above. The deviations from linearity are especially pronounced at high rates of scanning VRF. As a heuristic approach to understanding this behavior, consider, as a rough approximation, that an ion in the quadrupole ion trap is a one-dimensional driven harmonic oscillator, a particle whose equation of motion is given by Eq. 1, where x is the position coordinate, ω is the oscillation frequency of the particle, m is mass, and F(t) is a periodic excitation force, F(t)=f cos(γt+β).
Resonance ejection may be achieved under the condition that ω=γ. As described by Landau (Mechanics 3rd Ed., 1976), the solution to Eq. 1 for this resonance condition is given by Eq. 2:
where a, α and β are constants.
Eq. 2 is useful for demonstrating several aspects of the resonance ejection process, and in particular to estimate the relative voltage required for particles of various masses to reach a given amplitude (i.e., to be ejected) in a constant amount of time. The force f in Eq. 2 corresponds to the resonant ejection voltage, Vreseject. According to Eq. 2, the displacement, x, of an ion from a central position may be approximated as sum of two oscillatory terms, the second of which depends on the magnitude of the resonant ejection voltage. The factor ft/2 mω in the second term has units of length and thus may be considered as the varying amplitude (i.e., a distance) of an oscillatory component of motion of the particle. In particular, Eq. 2 shows that, at resonance, the amplitude of the ion motion grows linearly with respect to time.
In order to achieve a close approach to mass-axis linearity as well as optimal peak characteristics, ions of different masses should be ejected at a constant time after attainment of the resonance condition for each respective mass. For this time constancy to occur, the quantity f, which is related to the voltage amplitude of the supplementary resonant ejection field, should increase linearly with mass, as illustrated in
The ions are transported from ion source chamber 110, which for an electrospray source will typically be held at or near atmospheric pressure, through several intermediate chambers 120, 125 and 130 of successively lower pressure, to a vacuum chamber 135 in which ion trap 140 resides. Efficient transport of ions from ion source 105 to ion trap 140 is facilitated by a number of ion optic components, including quadrupole RF ion guides 145 and 150, octopole RF ion guide 155, skimmer 160, and electrostatic lenses 165 and 170. Ions may be transported between ion source chamber 110 and first intermediate chamber 120 through an ion transfer tube 175 that is heated to evaporate residual solvent and break up solvent-analyte clusters. Intermediate chambers 120, 125 and 130 and vacuum chamber 135 are evacuated by a suitable arrangement of pumps to maintain the pressures therein at the desired values. In one example, intermediate chamber 120 communicates with a port of a mechanical pump (not depicted), and intermediate pressure chambers 125 and 130 and vacuum chamber 135 communicate with corresponding ports of a multistage, multiport turbo-molecular pump (also not depicted). Ion trap 140 includes a set of rod electrodes 142 which generate an approximate two-dimensional quadrupolar field for radial confinement of ions. The ion trap 140 further includes end sections 141 and 143 having respective axial trapping electrodes in order to generate of a potential well for axial confinement of ions. Controlled gating of ions into the interior volume of ion trap 140 is effected by lens 170. A damping/collision gas inlet (not depicted), coupled to a source of an inert gas such as helium or argon, will typically be provided to controllably add a damping/collision gas to the interior of ion trap 140 in order to facilitate ion trapping, fragmentation and cooling. Lenses 180 and 185 are plate lenses which function to focus the ions into (and possibly out) of the trap and to limit the conductance of the trap so as to maintain an appropriate helium (or other gas) pressure within the trap. Ion trap 140 is additionally provided with at least one set of detectors 190 that generate a signal representative of the abundance of ions ejected from the ion trap.
Ion trap 140, as well as other components of mass spectrometer 100, communicate with and operate under the control of a data and control system (not depicted), which will typically include a combination of one or more general purpose computers and application-specific circuitry and processors. Generally described, the data and control system acquires and processes data and directs the functioning of the various components of mass spectrometer 100. The data and control system will have the capability of executing a set of instructions, typically encoded as software or firmware, for carrying out the calibration methods described herein.
While
Optimized Resonance Ejection Amplitude Vs. Mass
As discussed above, it is desirable to achieve ejection voltages that linearize the mass scale while simultaneously optimizing peak characteristics. The desired condition is met when ions of different mass are excited and ejected from the trap in the same amount of time. As illustrated by Equation 2, the time required for ejection depends on the initial amplitude of ion motion, and ions of different mass have different initial amplitudes of motion. Thus, we may find a correction to the linear scan in the form of a relation describing the ion initial amplitude of motion as a function of mass, or the ion initial positions as a function of mass, which are proportional to amplitude.
The following discussion demonstrates that the required voltages for achieving linearity ejection times and for achieving optimized peak characteristics are approximately the same. As a starting point, we note that Li et al. (“Comparison of Equilibrium Ion Density Distribution and Trapping Force in Penning, Paul, and Combined Ion Traps” Jour. Amer. Soc. Mass Spectrometry, 1998, 9(5), pp. 473-481) derived analytical expressions for the number density of ions in a Paul trap as a function of position, x. Eq. 3 gives Eq. 16c from their paper,
where N is number of ions, kb is Boltzmann's constant, T is absolute temperature, and kx is the trapping force constant for ions trapped in a pseudo-potential harmonic oscillator well, given by Eq. 4 as
in which Ω is the main RF frequency. Eq. 4 is obtained from Eq. 3c in Li et al., after rearranging to give an expression at a constant Mathieu q value for each mass.
It should be noted that Eq. 4 does not depend on the ion charge. Numerical simulations (not shown) performed by the inventors have demonstrated that ions of the same mass-to-charge but different charge may have different average positions, but only because of the effect of collisions with the buffer gas. Calculated differences in ejection time for these ions were less than 0.01 Da at 33 kDa/s, and were shown to depend on pressure. Although this result has yet to be confirmed experimentally, we assume that charge state may be ignored in our calibrations. We also note that, although Eq. 4 is not strictly applicable for Mathieu q values greater than 0.40, the data presented below nonetheless suggest that the results are adequately approximated using the pseudo-potential well approximation implied by Eq. 4. The pseudo-potential well model has previously been applied in the range of q>0.40 with some degree of success (e.g., Makarov, Anal. Chem. 1996, 68, 4257-4263).
Eq. 3 above can be integrated to give the average x position of the ions, with the result that average position is proportional to the inverse square root of mass, as in Eq. 5.
The relationship given by Eq. 5 has been confirmed with numerical simulations of ions trapped in a linear ion trap mass spectrometer. In the calculations, a total of 10240 ions at each mass were modeled as in equilibrium with helium gas at 0.35 mTorr for 60 ms at a Mathieu q value of 0.76. The average position of the ions under these conditions was recorded. The average distance of various ions from the trap center, as determined in the above fashion, is plotted in
The general form of the results depicted in
Vreseject=mc(ar+brm) Eq. 6
The calibration of resonant ejection voltage vs. mass can be performed via a non-linear least-squares fit of experimental data to Eq. 6. For comparison purposes, the same experimental data may be fit to the square root of mass relationship prescribed by Franzen in U.S. Pat. No. 5,298,746, that prior relationship having the form Vreseject=ar+brm0.5.
The graphs in
The effect of the mass-dependent initial ion amplitudes is compounded when fast scanning rates are used. This effect is calculated using Eq. 2 and the results of such calculations are shown in
Mass Accuracy Considerations
When both trapping RF and supplementary RF are scanned linearly with respect to time, gross mass accuracy errors are observed of more than 1 Da at a scan rate of 33 kDa/s. These errors may be reduced by varying the supplementary voltage in a nonlinear fashion, but some residual error persists. These errors for scan rates of 10.0 kDa/s, 16.6 kDa/s, 22.2 kDa/s, 33.3 kDa/s and 66.7 kDa/s are shown in
In order to develop a means to account for the mass errors illustrated in
The simulations noted above further indicate that the rate of change of amplitude and frequency near ejection is mass dependent, as is demonstrated in
y
3(x)=p exp(rm) Eq. 9
where p, q and r are constants, are examples of three functions which fit the data in
Terms of the form of either Eq. 7, Eq. 8 or Eq. 9 can be summed to the linear terms to give a mass scanning function (e.g., applied voltage vs. time or vs. mass) which gives optimum mass accuracy throughout the mass range, even at fast scan rates. For instance, a mass scanning function that is of the form of one of Eqs. 10-12, such as
VRF(m)=am+b+y1(m) Eq. 10
VRF(m)=am+b+y2(m) Eq. 11
VRF(m)=am+b+y3(m) Eq. 12
may be employed where VRF(m) is the applied RF trapping voltage, as a function of m, that is necessary to eject an ion having mass-to-charge ratio, m, and a and b are the usual constants applicable to linear equations of one variable. More generally, methods in accordance with the present teachings include the use of a mass scanning function that does not have a constant first derivative over the full scanning range.
Because of hardware or software limitations, scanning voltages with functional forms other than linear may be challenging or may not always be possible, and in such situations, a piecewise-linear scan which closely approximates the desired function could be implemented. The piecewise-linear scan, having discontinuities at the nodes, is not continuously differentiable, but its pieces all have constant first derivatives. Finally, as long as the supplementary voltage was varied in the manner proscribed earlier in this document to generate peaks with optimal peak characteristics, then the main RF could be scanned linearly and the residual mass errors eliminated by a software correction that uses a non-linear form, preferably a function of the form of Eqs. 10 or 11.
Calibration Method
It should be noted that, in this document, the term “ion type” refers to a category of ions such that all ions of a particular ion type category comprise the same atomic composition and charge. Thus, all ions of a particular ion type category are associated with a single mass-to-charge ratio. Calibrant ions are ions (i.e., charged particles) of any ion type and not necessarily comprising a single ion type that are used to calibrate an operational aspect or parameter of an analytical instrument. A calibrant material is a chemical compound or a mixture of compounds—either in solid, liquid or gaseous state or in solution in such a state—that, when ionized, gives rise to calibrant ions. Ionization of a single calibrant material may give rise to various ions comprising a plurality of ion types, even if the calibrant material comprises a single compound.
Each calibrant ion type may provide, in Step 308, a data point for an optimum value of Vreseject at a particular value of mass-to-charge. In general, the optimum value of Vreseject will be the value at which peak quality is observed to be optimal. The equations used to calculate peak quality may be pre-determined in a software algorithm or may be selected or adjusted in accordance with operator input. Such input may include information identifying or weighing the importance of certain peak characteristics. To obtain a sufficient number of data points, Steps 306 and 308 may need to be repeated for a plurality of different calibration standards. In Step 310, the optimal Vreseject values are fit to an equation of form Vreseject mc(ar+brm), where ar, br and c are constants, which may be determined by the fitting procedure, and with c≈0.5, for instance, 0.40≦c≦060. The values of the constants in this equation may be stored for later use in calculating a value of the resonant ejection voltage at any mass.
In Step 312, data are acquired to perform a preliminary coarse mass calibration, which should give a mass accuracy of +/−1 Da over the entire mass range. This coarse calibration can be performed by observing, in Step 312, the trapping voltages, VRF, required for ejection of two or more known calibrant ion types of differing m/z. The two or more calibrant ion types may be produced from at least one calibrant material by ionizing the material. The calibrant material or materials employed in this step may be the same as or different from the calibrant material or materials employed in Step 306. During this step, the supplementary resonant ejection voltage is maintained at a value appropriate for the m/z of each respective calibrant ion type, as calculated from the fit equation determined in Step 310. The calibrant ions comprise a set of known m/z values. The value of VRF associated with each such m/z value is recorded for subsequent use in the subsequent coarse mass calibration step, Step 314. Step 312 may be performed by introducing a mixture of calibrant ion types into the ion trap simultaneously such that a single mass scan over a great enough mass range will be sufficient to detect all of the calibrant ion types, each ion type having a different respective mass-to-charge ratio. Alternatively, Step 312 may be performed by introducing ions produced from each respective one of the various calibrant materials one-at-a-time into the ion trap. This may occur, for example, if the ions are generated from respective substances that elute from or come off of a chromatographic column according to different respective retention times. In such a case, Step 312 is repeated as necessary, in conjunction with each calibrant ion. In some situations, Step 312 may be performed by introducing ions produced from only a single calibrant material.
In Step 314, a preliminary mass scanning function, such as a linear function, is determined so as to provide a “coarse” or approximate fit to the values of m/z. in terms of VRF. The values of the constants in the fit equation may be stored for use in the subsequent steps. Next a fine mass calibration is performed, which eliminates the residual mass errors. For best results, this should be done by measuring the ejection positions of known calibrant ion types at positions across the entire mass range. Accordingly, in Step 316, data are acquired so as to perform a fine calibration by acquiring one or more mass spectra of selected calibrant ion types. The calibrant ion types employed in this step may or may not be the same calibrant ion types employed in either Step 306 or Step 312. Likewise, the number of calibrant ion types or calibrant materials employed in Step 316 may or may not be the same as the number of calibrant ion types or materials employed in either Step 306 or Step 312. A convenient method is to include the use of tandem mass spectrometry, known as MS/MS, to fragment known calibrant precursor ions into known fragment ions, and measure their ejection positions thereby minimizing the number of compounds required in the calibration mixture. The calibrant ions comprise a set of known m/z values. The value of VRF associated with each such m/z value is recorded for subsequent use in the subsequent fine mass calibration step, Step 318.
The data comprising known m/z, ejection time pairs can then be fit, in Step 318, to a function that does not have constant first derivative over entire mass range to determine the mass scanning function which reduces mass error to the minimum level. For example, the fit function may be one of the forms described above in Eq. 10, Eq. 11 and Eq. 12. The instrument can then be operated (Step 320) using these calibrated relationships for supplementary and main RF voltage vs. mass for best performance. Alternatively, if there is a requirement to calibrate supplementary and trapping voltages in conjunction with other scan rates (Step 319), then before the instrument is operated, execution may branch back to step 304, in which a new analytical scan rate is set, and then the sequence of steps 306-318 is repeated in conjunction with the new scan rate.
The sequence of Steps 304-318 may be repeated any number of times so as to include any number of scan rates in the calibration. In fact, scan rate, s, may be treated as an independent experimental variable, with V reseject and VRF being considered as functions of the two variables m and s, such as Vreseject=f1(m, s) and VRF=f2(m, s), where f1 and f2 are functions of two variables of any suitable form. In the context of the present discussion, it is convenient to consider the scan-rate dependence as completely absorbed into some or all of the various parameters ar, br, c, a, b, p, q and r introduced previously herein. For instance, setting ar=g1(s), br=g2(s), and c=g3(s), where the functions g1, g2, and g2 are functions only of the scan rate variable s, then the formula for V reseject (Eq. 6) becomes
Vreseject=mg3(s)(g1(s)+g2(s)×m) Eq. 6b
and the various expressions for VRF (e.g., Eqs. 10-12) may be modified similarly. As one example, the functions g1(s), g2(s), and g3(s) may be simple linear or polynomial functions of scan rate, s. During each iteration of the steps 304-318 at a respective scan rate, new respective values for each of the various parameters (ar, br, c, etc.) will, in general, be calculated. The various calculated values for each parameter may be then fit to the respective model function of the form g1(s), g2(s), g3(s), etc. The benefits of such a procedure would then be improved statistics relating to the mass-axis calibration at any given scan rate, and the possibility of using a continuous range of usable scan rates instead of a finite discrete set.
Returning to the general discussion of the method 300, in the instrument operation stage (Step 320) illustrated in
In the method 340 (
Maintaining optimal peak characteristics and mass accuracy on a fast scanning quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer is a task which cannot be performed with a linear scan of supplementary resonance ejection voltage. The voltage which optimizes peak characteristics is the one where each ion nominally is ejected in the same amount of time. For this, the initial distribution of ion positions must be accounted for, which has an inverse square root dependency and is pressure dependant. Therefore, the best resonant ejection voltage can be found as the product of a first voltage function that varies as the square root of mass-to-charge ratio with a second voltage function that varies linearly with mass-to-charge ratio. The resulting resonance ejection voltage function is an equation of the form of V=mc(a+bm) where V is an applied voltage, m is mass-to-charge ratio and a, b and c are constants determined by calibration. Although varying the resonant ejection voltage in this manner eliminates a portion of the mass errors, residual errors are observed, likely due to the non-stationary excitation process. With the resonance ejection voltage varying in this manner, the residual mass errors can be compensated for, if necessary, by a mass scan whose functional form deviates from linear at low mass, and approaches linear at high mass. More generally, the scanning function can be said to not comprise a constant first derivative over the full mass range of the scanning. Alternatively, the main RF can be scanned linearly, and the residual mass errors can be eliminated through a software correction having the same functional form.
The discussion included in this application is intended to serve as a basic description. Although the present invention has been described in accordance with the various embodiments shown and described, one of ordinary skill in the art will readily recognize that there could be variations to the embodiments and those variations would be within the spirit and scope of the present invention. The reader should be aware that the specific discussion may not explicitly describe all embodiments possible; many alternatives are implicit. Accordingly, many modifications may be made by one of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the spirit, scope and essence of the invention. Neither the description nor the terminology is intended to limit the scope of the invention. All patent application disclosures, patent application publications or other publications are hereby explicitly incorporated by reference herein as if fully set forth herein.
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