The present invention relates to methods and systems for providing a substantially quadrupole field with significant hexapole and octapole components
The performance of ion trap mass spectrometers can be limited by a number of different factors such as, for example, space charge density. Accordingly, improved mass spectrometer systems, as well as methods of operation, that address these limitations, are desirable.
In accordance with an aspect of an embodiment of the present invention, there is provided a method of processing ions in a linear ion trap, the method comprising establishing and maintaining a two-dimensional asymmetric substantially quadrupole field having a first axis, a first axis potential along the first axis, a second axis orthogonal to the first axis and a second axis potential along the second axis, and then introducing ions to the field. The first axis potential comprises a quadrupole harmonic of amplitude A21, a hexapole harmonic of amplitude A31 and an octapole harmonic of amplitude A41, wherein in various embodiments A41 is greater than 0.001% of A21, wherein in various embodiments A41 is greater than 0.01% of A21, A41 is less than 5% of A21 and 33% of A31, and for any other higher order harmonic with amplitude An1 present of auxiliary electrodes, and the auxiliary RF voltage provided to the first pair of auxiliary electrodes to slide the sliding m/z ratio toward the selected m/z.
In accordance with an aspect of an embodiment of the present invention, a method is provided wherein the linear ion trap comprises a first pair of rods, a second pair of rods and two auxiliary electrodes interposed between one of the first pair of rods and one of the second pair of rods and comprising a pair of auxiliary electrodes separated by a first plane bisecting either one of the first pair of rods or one of the second pair of rods. The first axis lies in the first plane and the second axis is orthogonal to the first plane. Establishing and maintaining the field comprises providing a first RF voltage to the first pair of rods at a first frequency and in a first phase, a second RF voltage to the second pair of rods at a second frequency equal to the first frequency and in a second phase, opposite to the first phase, and an auxiliary RF voltage to the first pair of auxiliary electrodes at an auxiliary frequency equal to the first frequency and shifted from the first phase by a phase shift, and a DC voltage to the pair of auxiliary electrodes. The method further comprises axially ejecting a selected portion of the ions from the field, the selected portion of the ions having a selected detecting the selected portion of the ions to provide a sliding mass signal peak centred about a sliding m/z ratio and adjusting at least one the phase of the auxiliary RF voltage, ii) the DC voltage provided to the pair of auxiliary electrodes, and iii) the auxiliary RF voltage provided to the pair of auxiliary electrodes to slide the sliding m/z ratio toward the selected m/z.
In various embodiments, the asymmetric substantially quadrupole field generated comprises an X axis, separating one auxiliary electrode from the other electrode. In various embodiments, the asymmetric substantially quadrupole field generated comprises a Y axis, separating one auxiliary electrode from the other electrode.
In accordance with another aspect of an embodiment of the present invention, there is provided a linear ion trap system comprising i) a central axis, ii) a first pair of rods, wherein each rod in the first pair of rods is spaced from and extends alongside the central axis, iii) a second pair of rods, wherein each rod in the second pair of rods is spaced from and extends alongside the central axis,
c illustrates overlapped mass spectra shown for different fill times zoomed around a mass of 261 Daltons taken from the full mass spectra of
Referring to
In some cases, fringing fields between neighboring pairs of rod sets may distort the flow of ions. Stubby rods 21 can be provided between orifice plate IQ1 and quadrupole mass spectrometer 16 to focus the flow of ions into the elongated rod set Q1. Optionally, stubby rods can also be included upstream and downstream of the collision cell Q2.
Ions can be collisionally cooled in Q0, which may be maintained at a pressure of approximately 8×10−3 torr. Quadrupole mass spectrometer 16 can operate as a conventional transmission RF/DC quadrupole mass spectrometer. In collision cell 18, ions can collide with a collision gas to be fragmented into products of lesser mass. Linear ion trap 20 can also be operated as a linear ion trap with or without mass selective axial ejection, more or less as described by Londry and Hager in the Journal of the American Association of Mass Spectrometry, 2003, 14, 1130-1147, and in U.S. Pat. No. 6,177,688, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
Ions can be trapped in linear ion trap 20 using radial RF voltages applied to the quadrupole rods and axial DC voltages applied to the end aperture lenses. In addition, as shown, linear ion trap 20 also comprises auxiliary electrodes 12.
As the ion population density increases within a linear ion trap, space charge effects can reduce mass accuracy. Thus, the operation of linear ion trap mass spectrometers can be limited by the space charge or the total number of ions that can be analyzed without affecting the analytical performance of the trap in terms of either mass accuracy or resolution.
In accordance with an aspect of an embodiment of the invention, auxiliary electrodes 12 can be used within linear ion trap 20 to create hexapole and octapole RF and electrostatic fields in addition to the main RF quadrupole field provided by the quadrupole rod array of the linear ion trap 20. The anharmonicity of these fields can change the dynamics of the ion cloud inside the ion trap during the ejection process and can reduce the deleterious effects of space charge to improve mass accuracy. These auxiliary electrodes can be used in contexts different from those shown in
In the variant of
As shown, the voltage supply 24 also provides a rod offset voltage RO to the rods, which can be equal for both the first pair of rods 26 and the second pair of rods 28. Typically, this rod offset voltage RO is a DC voltage opposite in polarity to the ions being confined within the linear ion trap.
As shown in
Also as shown in
By providing the auxiliary electrodes 12a and 12b in the asymmetrical configuration shown in
In addition, the balance of the main RF (that is the relative magnitudes of the first RF voltage and the second RF voltage—these two magnitudes need not be the same) can also play a role in defining the range of the optimum phase shift and RF amplitude provided to the auxiliary electrodes to achieve a particular trade-off between mass resolution and sensitivity, for a specific mass.
Also, the optimum RF voltage applied to the auxiliary electrodes 12 as well as the phase shift relative to the main drive RF voltage applied to the main rods 26, 28 can depend not only on the RF balance on the quadrupole array but also on the excitation q or the frequency Ω. In the foregoing examples, excitation q was 0.823. Experimentally it has been observed that when the excitation q was changed from 0.823 to 0.742 the desired phase shift for mass accuracy varied by 37 degrees. More precisely, the desired phase shift increased by 37 degrees. More generally, the phase shift may be adjusted to improve mass accuracy when one or more of the following variables are changed: i) a magnitude of the first RF voltage; i) a magnitude of the second RF voltage; and, iii) the first frequency of the first RF voltage (which is also the second frequency of the second RF voltage).
Using a dipolar auxiliary signal, ions were excited at their fundamental secular frequency ω0=βΩ/2 where Ω is the angular frequency of the RF drive and β is a function of the Mathieu stability parameters a and q as described, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 7,034,293, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
When the voltage applied to the rods 26 and 28 (see
a=0; and
q=2zV/(4m Ω2r02)
where V is the zero to peak amplitude of a sinusoidal voltage of angular frequency Ω.
In the foregoing description, ω0 is the frequency in the case when the nonlinear components are not taken into consideration as contributors. Due to the presence of higher order terms, such as the hexapole and octapole, the ion secular frequency can shift and the shift can vary with the amplitude of the radial motion of the ions.
Referring to
In the variant of
Referring to
In the variant of
As shown, the voltage supply 24 can also provide a rod offset voltage RO to the rods, which can be equal for both the first pair of rods 26 and the second pair of rods 28. Typically, this rod offset voltage RO is a DC voltage opposite in polarity to the ions being confined within the linear ion trap.
As shown in
A dipolar excitation AC voltage can be provided by, say, an auxiliary AC voltage source 32, to the first pair of rods 26 to provide a dipolar excitation signal to provide axial ejection. Optionally, the selected ions that are excited by the dipolar excitation signal can be axially ejected past an axial lens 33 (shown in
By providing the auxiliary electrodes 12a and 12b in the asymmetrical configuration shown in
By applying voltages in the asymmetric manner described above, different potentials can be provided along the X axis and the Y axis of the two-dimensional field to provide the asymmetry. That is, the potential on the Y axis can comprise, in addition to the main quadrupole component, dodecapole, decapole, octapole, hexapole and dipole components. The hexapole component A3y can be the strongest higher order component, being at least three times stronger than the octapole component A4y and more than 50 times stronger than higher multipoles Any, where ny is an integer greater than 4. The dipole component can be about ten times stronger than the hexapole component A3y. In contrast, the potential on the X-axis can comprise, in addition to the main quadrupole component A2x mainly an octapole component A4x, every other higher order component (A3y and Any, nx being an integer greater than 4) having amplitudes less than 5% of the octapole component A4x.
The relative purity of the field that can be generated, in that it is substantially limited to quadrupole, hexapole and octapole components, arises at least partly as a consequence of the symmetry of the linear ion trap 20 in the extraction region comprising auxiliary electrodes 12, together with the limited asymmetry of the voltages provided as described above. That is, as shown in
In various embodiments, the amplitude of the DC voltages, DC1 and DC2, provided to the auxiliary electrodes 12, can be selected to be in a pre-desired range corresponding to a particular mass range and/or mass ranges of ions to be ejected as well as scan rate of the mass selective axial ejection. Optionally, DC1, DC2, U or V may be varied over time to different levels depending upon the mass-to-charge ratio of the ions being scanned. For example, a first setting for DC1, DC2, U and V can be set at a predetermined level for ions within a first mass-to-charge ratio range. Suitable levels of DC1, DC2, U and V could be determined, for example, by axial ejection of a calibrant ion within or close to this first mass-to-charge ratio range. Then, after ions within this first mass-to-charge ratio range have been axially ejected or scanned, the levels of DC1, DC2, U and V can be adjusted to scan or axially eject ions within a second mass-to-charge ratio range, different from the first mass-to-charge ratio range. Again, suitable levels of DC1, DC2, U and V for the second mass-to-charge ratio range can be determined by axial ejection or scanning of a second calibrant ion within, or close to, the second mass-to-charge ratio range.
One example of ion path voltages for mass spectrometer system 10 of
During cooling, DC1 and DC2 voltages can be dropped to −170V, while the rod offset voltage applied to the rods 26, 28 of the linear ion trap 20 can be dropped first to −80V, then to −100V, and finally, 10 ms before the scan, this voltage can be dropped to −160V.
During mass selective axial ejection, the rod offset voltage of the collision cell 18 can be set to −200V, while IQ3 can be set to 100V. The optional stubby rods downstream of the collision cell 18 and upstream of the linear ion trap 20 can be set at a voltage of 100V, while the rod offset voltage of the rods 26, 28 can be set to −160V. Again, according to the first configuration of
In accordance with an aspect of an embodiment of the present invention, ions in a 10 Dalton window around mass 322 Daltons can be transmitted through quadrupole mass spectrometer 16 operated as a mass filter, and then fragmented at a collision energy of 27 eV in a collision cell 18. All of the fragments and unfragmented precursor ions can then be trapped in the downstream ion trap 20, where they can be cooled over a cooling time. After this cooling time, the ions can be mass selectively ejected from the trap 20 toward a detector 35 and mass spectra can be acquired.
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
As described above, dipolar excitation may be provided to either the first pair of rods 26, or to a pair of diagonally oriented auxiliary electrodes 12. According to other embodiments of the invention, however, quadrupolar excitation can be used instead. Referring to
Similar to the variant of
In the variant of
Referring to
A second auxiliary electrode 12, designated using both reference numerals 12a and 12c, receives DC voltage, DC1, an RF voltage component U cos(Ωt+φ), and a dipolar excitation voltage −AC cos ωt. Similar to the first auxiliary electrode discussed above, the RF voltage U cos(Ωt+φ) applied to the auxiliary electrodes 12a, 12c has been phase shifted by φ relative to the RF voltage provided to the main electrodes 26 and 28. The dipolar excitation voltage frequency ω can be much lower than the first frequency Ω.
A third auxiliary electrode 12, designated using both reference numerals 12b and 12c, receives DC voltage, DC2, and a dipolar excitation voltage AC cos ωt, while the fourth auxiliary electrode 12, designated using both reference numerals 12b and 12d, receives only DC voltage, DC2.
Similar to the configuration of
According to an aspect of an embodiment of the present invention there is provided a linear ion trap mass spectrometer system 10 comprising a central axis, a first pair of rods 26, a second pair of rods 28, four auxiliary electrodes 12 and voltage supplies 24, 30, 32, 34. Each rod in the first pair of rods 26 and the second pair of rods 28 can be spaced from and extend along the central axis. The four auxiliary electrodes 12 can be interposed between the first pair of rods 26 and the second pair of rods 28 in an extraction region 37 defined along at least a part of a length of the first pair of rods and the second pair of rods. The four auxiliary electrodes can comprise a first pair of auxiliary electrodes 12a and a second pair of auxiliary electrodes 12b. The first pair of auxiliary electrodes 12a can be separated by and adjacent to a single rod in either the first pair of rods or the second pair of rods, while the second pair of auxiliary electrodes 12b can be separated by and adjacent to the other rod paired to the rod separating the first pair of auxiliary electrodes. The voltage supplies can be connected to the first pair of rods, the second pair of rods and the four auxiliary electrodes, and can be operable to provide i) a first RF voltage to the first pair of rods at a first frequency and in a first phase, ii) a second RF voltage to the second pair of rods at a second frequency equal to the first frequency and in a second phase, opposite to the first phase, iii) an auxiliary RF voltage to the first pair of auxiliary electrodes at an auxiliary frequency equal to the first frequency and shifted from the first phase by a phase shift, iv) a first DC voltage, DC1. to the first pair of auxiliary electrodes, and v) a second DC voltage, DC2, to the second pair of auxiliary electrodes.
Optionally, the linear ion trap system 10 can comprise a detector 36 positioned to detect ions axially ejected from the rods set and the auxiliary electrodes. Further optionally, the voltage supplies can comprise a first voltage source 24a operable to provide a first RF voltage to the first pair of rods, a second voltage source 24b operable to provide a second RF voltage to the second pair of rods, an auxiliary voltage source 30 operable to provide the auxiliary RF voltage to the first pair of auxiliary electrodes, and a phase controller (not shown) for controlling a phase and a phase shift of the auxiliary voltage provided by the auxiliary RF voltage source.
In a further embodiment, the auxiliary voltage source can be operable to provide a first auxiliary DC voltage, DC1, to the first pair of auxiliary electrodes, and the voltage supplies can further comprise a second auxiliary voltage source 34 for providing a second auxiliary DC voltage, DC2, to the second pair of auxiliary electrodes.
Optionally, the auxiliary voltage source 30 can be further operable or adjustable to change the first auxiliary DC voltage, DC1, provided to the first pair of auxiliary electrodes 12a, while the second auxiliary voltage source 34 can be further operable to adjust the second auxiliary DC voltage, DC2 provided to the second pair of auxiliary electrodes 12b. The phase controller can be further operable to adjust the phase shift of the auxiliary voltage provided by the auxiliary RF voltage source 30.
Further optionally, the voltage source 32 can be operable to provide a dipolar excitation AC voltage to either the first pair of rods 26, or a diagonally oriented pair of auxiliary electrodes 12 at a lower frequency ω than the first frequency Ω to radially excite the selected portion of the ions having the selected m/z. In embodiments in which it is the diagonally oriented pair of auxiliary electrodes that is provided with the dipolar excitation DC voltage, this diagonally oriented pair of auxiliary electrodes can comprise one electrode from each of the first pair of auxiliary electrodes 12a and the second pair of auxiliary electrodes 12b.
In some embodiments, the linear ion trap 20 is configured such that at any point along the central axis, an associated plane orthogonal to the central axis intersects the central axis, intersects the first pair of rods at an associated first pair of cross section, and intersects the second pair of rods at an associated second pair of cross sections. For example, in the sectional view of
In many embodiments, the extraction portion 37 of the central axis comprises less than half a length of the central axis.
Optionally, the extraction region can be an ejection end of the first pair of rods 26 and the second pair of rods 28, and the four auxiliary electrodes 12 can extend axially beyond the ejection end of the first pair of rods 26 and second pair of rods 28. Alternatively, the four auxiliary electrodes 12 can end short of the ejection end of the first pair of rods 26 and the second pair of rods 28. Optionally, each cross section in the first pair of auxiliary cross sections and the second pair of auxiliary cross sections can be substantially T-shaped, including a rectangular base section connected to a rectangular top section.
Using the linear ion trap mass spectrometer system of
According to the first configuration shown in
On the other hand, in the case of the second configuration of
Optionally, A31 can be greater than 30, or even 50 times An1.
Optionally, the linear ion trap 20 comprises a first pair of rods 26, a second pair of rods 28 and four auxiliary electrodes 12 interposed between the first pair of rods 26 and the second pair of rods 28 and comprising a first pair of auxiliary electrodes 12 and a second pair of auxiliary electrodes 12 separated by a first plane bisecting one of the first pair of rods 26 and the second pair of rods 28. Relating this embodiment to the above-described embodiments, 1) the first axis lies in the first plane and the second axis is orthogonal to the first plane, and 2) establishing and maintaining the field comprises providing i) a first RF voltage to the first pair of rods 26 at a first frequency and in a first phase, ii) a second RF voltage to the second pair of rods 28 at a second frequency equal to the first frequency and in a second phase, opposite to the first phase, and iii) an auxiliary RF voltage to the first pair of auxiliary electrodes at an auxiliary frequency equal to the first frequency and shifted from the first phase by a phase shift, iv) a first DC voltage to the first pair of auxiliary electrodes, and v) a second DC voltage to the second pair of auxiliary electrodes. The method may further comprise: 1) axially transmitting, that is axially ejecting as known in the art, a selected portion of the ions from the field, the selected portion of the ions having a selected m/z; 2) detecting the selected portion of the ions to provide a sliding mass signal peak centered about a sliding m/z ratio and 3) adjusting at least one of i) the phase shift the auxiliary RF voltage; ii) the first DC voltage provided to the first pair of auxiliary electrodes, iii) the second DC voltage provided to the second pair of auxiliary electrodes, and iv) the auxiliary RF voltage provided to the first pair of auxiliary electrodes to slide the sliding m/z ratio toward the selected m/z.
Optionally, establishing and maintaining the field can comprise providing a second DC voltage DC2 to the second pair of auxiliary electrodes 12b without providing an RF voltage to the second pair of auxiliary electrodes 12b.
Further optionally, establishing and maintaining the field can comprise providing a second auxiliary RF voltage to the second pair of auxiliary electrodes 12b with the second DC voltage DC2, wherein the second auxiliary RF voltage is 180° phase shifted relative to the auxiliary RF voltage provided to the first pair of auxiliary electrodes.
Optionally, the phase shift of the auxiliary RF voltage can be changed by a phase controller, such as, for example, a phase variable all-pass filter coupled to a downstream RF amplifier to slide the sliding m/z ratio toward the selected m/z. The actual phase shift relative to the first phase can be zero. The sliding m/z ratio is termed such as this m/z ratio can be moved along the horizontal axis of the mass spectrum by adjusting variables such as the phase shift of the auxiliary RF voltage, the first DC voltage provided to the first pair of auxiliary electrodes, the second DC voltage provided to the second pair of auxiliary electrodes, and the auxiliary RF voltage provided to the first pair of auxiliary electrodes.
Optionally, the phase shift can be between 50° and 70°, or between 59° and 61°, or between −70° and 70°. According to further embodiments, the desired phase shift can also depend on an imbalance of the RF voltages provided to the first pair of rods 26 and the second pair of rods 28. As described above, this phase shift can also be adjusted from the optimal phase shift between 50° and 70° or optionally between −70° and 70° to achieve better peak resolution at the cost of reduced sensitivity. That is, at a higher phase shift, the amplitude of the RF of the auxiliary electrodes can be increased without a loss in mass accuracy. Additionally, the balance of the RF applied to the main rods 26, 28 of the linear ion trap 20, can also play a role in defining the range of the optimal phase shift, and the RF amplitude on the auxiliary electrodes 12 required to achieve a specific mass resolution and sensitivity. In other words, while in the variants shown in
The potential of a linear quadrupole with an added hexapole octopole, and no other multipoles is given by equation (1) and (2). See, for example Douglas et al., Russian Journal of The Technical Physics, 1999, vol. 69, 96-101. When a dipole moment is also present on one of the axes, the X axis for the variant of
According to variants of embodiments of the present invention, the field generated can be considered a two-dimensional asymmetric substantially quadrupole field comprising a central axis, wherein the first axis and the second axis (being the X axis and the Y axis, not necessarily respectively) described above in connection with other variants of the invention, intersect at the central axis. As described above, the first axis bisects the cross-sections of one pair of rods, while the second axis bisects the cross-sections of another pair of rods. In this two dimensional field, a sum obtained by adding the absolute value of the octapole component Φ4 and the absolute value of the hexapole component Φ3 along the first axis can increase moving from the cross-sections bisected by the first axis to the central axis. Similarly, also in this two-dimensional field, a second sum obtained by adding the absolute value of the octapole component Φ4 along the second axis, and the absolute value of the hexapole component Φ3 along the second axis can increase moving from the pair of rods bisected by the second axis toward the central axis.
According to further embodiments, the linear ion trap 20 of linear ion trap system 10 of
In a further variant of this embodiment of the present invention, axially trapping the selected portion of the ions in the extraction region before axially transmitting, that is axially ejecting the selected portion of the ions may comprise providing a rod offset voltage RO to the first pair of rods and the second pair of rods. The rod offset voltage RO can be higher than the DC voltage provided to the four auxiliary electrodes. A DC trapping voltage can also be provided to the axial lens 33, and the rod offset voltage can be lower than this axial lens voltage. By this means, a voltage well can be created in the vicinity of the auxiliary electrodes 12 to hold the selected portion of the ions prior to their axial ejection.
As described above, transmitting, that is axially ejecting the selected portion of the ions m/z from the field can comprise providing a dipolar excitation AC voltage to either the first pair of rods or a diagonally oriented pair of auxiliary electrodes at a lower frequency than the first frequency to radially excite the selected portion of the ions having the selected m/z. As shown in
Optionally, as described above, axially transmitting, that is axially ejecting the selected portion of the ions having the selected m/z from the field can comprise providing a quadrupole excitation AC voltage to both the first pair of rods and the second pair of rods at a lower frequency than the first frequency to radially excite the selected portion of the ions having the selected m/z.
According to further variants of embodiments of the present invention, the auxiliary electrodes 12 and main rods 26, 28, can be recalibrated after ejection of a selected portion of the ions to eject subsequent portions of the ions having different m/z. For example, different settings for either the phase shift of the auxiliary frequency of the auxiliary RF voltage or the first DC voltage provided to the first pair of auxiliary electrodes, or the second DC voltage provided to the second pair of auxiliary electrodes, or the auxiliary RF voltage provided to the first pair of auxiliary electrodes, may be desirable to slide the sliding m/z ratio toward the selected m/z for different ions of different m/z. Thus, according to some embodiments of the present invention, after axially transmitting, that is axially ejecting the selected portion of the ions having a selected m/z from the field, the method can further comprise 1) axially transmitting, that is axially ejecting a second selected portion of the ions from the field, the second selected portion of the ions having a selected m/z; 2) detecting a second selected portion of the ions to provide a second sliding mass signal peak centered about a second sliding m/z ratio, and 3) adjusting at least one of i) the phase shift of the auxiliary frequency of the auxiliary RF voltage; ii) the first DC voltage provided to the first pair of auxiliary electrodes; iii) the second DC voltage provided to the second pair of auxiliary electrode; and iv) the auxiliary RF voltage provided to the first pair of auxiliary electrodes to slide the sliding m/z ratio toward the selected m/z.
Optionally, the phase shift may be adjusted based on changes to one or more of the following variables: i) a magnitude of the first RF voltage; i) a magnitude of the second RF voltage; and, iii) the first frequency of the first RF voltage (which is also the second frequency of the second RF voltage).
In use, in accordance with an aspect of an embodiment of the present invention, there is provided a method of processing ions in a method establishing and maintaining a two-dimensional asymmetric substantially quadrupole field having a first axis, a first axis potential along the first axis, a second axis orthogonal to the first axis and a second axis potential along the second axis, and then introducing ions to the field. The first axis potential comprises a quadrupole harmonic of amplitude A21, a hexapole harmonic of amplitude A31 and an octapole harmonic of amplitude A41, wherein in various embodiments, A41 is greater than
embodiments wherein A41 is greater than
A21 and 33% of A31, and for any other higher order harmonic with amplitude present in the first axis potential, n1 being any integer greater
greater than ten times An1. The second axis potential comprises a quadrupole harmonic of amplitude A22, and an octapole harmonic of amplitude A42, wherein in various embodiments A42 is greater than 0.001% of A22, and wherein in various embodiments A42 is greater than 0.01% of A22, A42 is less than 5% of A22 and, for any other higher order harmonic with amplitude An2 present in the second axis potential of the field, n2 being any integer greater than 2 except 4, A42 is greater than ten times An2.
In accordance with an aspect of an embodiment of the present invention, A31 is greater than thirty times An1. In accordance with an aspect of an embodiment of the present invention, A31 is greater than fifty times An1.
In accordance with an aspect of an embodiment of the present invention, a method is provided wherein the linear ion trap comprises a first pair
This application claims priority to U.S. provisional application No. 61/376,851 filed Aug. 25, 2010, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB11/01951 | 8/25/2011 | WO | 00 | 6/7/2013 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61376851 | Aug 2010 | US |