This application claims priority to United Kingdom Patent Application No. GB0611221.3, filed Jun. 8, 2006, and United Kingdom Patent Application No. GB0620256.8, filed Oct. 12, 2006, which are expressly incorporated herein by reference and made a part hereof.
Not applicable.
This invention relates to mass spectrometry, and in particular to the use of mass spectrometry in conjunction with liquid chromatography or capillary electrophoresis. The invention more particularly relates to a microengineered interface device for use in mass spectrometry systems.
Electrospray is a method of coupling ions derived from a liquid source such as a liquid chromatograph or capillary electrophoresis system into a vacuum analysis system such as a mass spectrometer (Whitehouse et al. 1985; U.S. Pat. No. 4,531,056). The liquid is typically a dilute solution of analyte in a solvent. The spray is induced by the action of a strong electric field at the end of capillary containing the liquid. The electric field draws the liquid out from the capillary into a Taylor cone, which emits a high-velocity spray at a threshold field that depends on the physical properties of the liquid (such as its conductivity and surface tension) and the diameter of the capillary. Increasingly, small capillaries known as nanospray capillaries are used to reduce the threshold electric field and the volume of spray (U.S. Pat. No. 5,788,166).
The spray typically contains a mixture of ions and droplets, which in turn contain a considerable fraction of low-mass solvent. The problem is generally to couple the majority of the analyte as ions into the vacuum system, at thermal velocities, without contaminating the inlet or introducing an excess background of solvent ions or neutrals. The vacuum interface carries out this function. Capillaries or apertured diaphragms can restrict the overall flow into the vacuum system. Conical apertured diaphragms, often known as molecular separators or skimmers can provide momentum separation of ions from light molecules from within a gas jet emerging into an intermediate vacuum (Bruins 1987; Duffin 1992; U.S. Pat. No. 3,803,811, U.S. Pat. No. 6,703,610; U.S. Pat. No. 7,098,452). Off-axis spray (USRE35413E) and obstructions (U.S. Pat. No. 6,248,999) can reduce line-of-sight contamination by droplets, and orthogonal ion sampling (U.S. Pat. No. 6,797,946) can reduce contamination still further. Arrays of small, closely spaced apertures can improve the coupling of ions over neutrals (U.S. Pat. No. 6,818,889). Co-operating electrodes (U.S. Pat. No. 5,157,260) and quadrupole ion guides (U.S. Pat. No. 4,963,736) can apply fields to encourage the preferential transmission of ions. The use of a differentially pumped chamber containing a gas at intermediate pressure can thermalise ion velocities, while the use of heated ion channels (U.S. Pat. No. 5,304,798) can encourage droplet desolvation. The device of U.S. Pat. No. 5,304,798 is fabricated in a thermally and electrically conductive material, and is a massive device, the heated channel being of the order of 1-4 cm long.
Vacuum interfaces are now highly developed, and can provide extremely low-noise ion sampling with low contamination. However, the use of macroscopic components results in orifices and chambers that are unnecessary large for nanospray emitters and that require large, high capacity pumps. Furthermore, the assemblies must be constructed from precisely machined metal elements separated by insulating, vacuum-tight seals. Consequently, they are complex and expensive, and require significant cleaning and maintenance.
These problems and others are addressed by the present invention by providing key elements of an interface to a vacuum system as a miniaturised component with reduced orifice and channel sizes thereby reducing the size and pumping requirements of vacuum interfaces. The advance over prior art is achieved by using the methods of microengineering technology such as lithography, etching and bonding of silicon to fabricate suitable electrodes, skimmers, gas flow channels and chambers. In further embodiments the invention provides for a making of such components with integral insulators and vacuum seals so that they may ultimately be disposable.
Accordingly the invention provides an interface component according to claim 1 with advantageous embodiments provided in the dependent claims thereto. The invention also provides a system according to claim 30. A method of fabricating an interface is also provided in claim 31.
These and other features of the invention will be understood with reference to the following figures.
A detailed description of the invention is provided with reference to exemplary embodiments shown in FIGS. 1 to 8.
A device in accordance with the teaching of the invention is desirably fabricated or constructed as a stacked assembly of semiconducting substrates, which are desirably formed from silicon. Such techniques will be well known to the person skilled in the art of microengineering.
The first silicon layer carries or defines a first central orifice 105. The interior side walls 112 of the first layer which define the orifice, include a proud or upstanding feature 106 on the outer side of the first wafer which is provided at a higher level than the remainder of the top surface 113 of the first layer. The outer region of the first wafer and the insulating layer are both removed, so that the second wafer is exposed in these peripheral regions 107. These peripheral regions define a step between the first and second wafer layers, and as will be described later may be used for locating external electrical connectors or the like. The second silicon layer carries an inner chamber 108, which consists of a second central orifice 109 intercepted by a transverse lateral passage 110, shown in the plan view of
The features 105, 106, 107, 109 and 110 may all be formed by photolithography and by combinations of silicon and silicon dioxide etching process that are well known in the art. In particular, deep reactive ion etching using an inductively coupled plasma etcher is a highly anisotropic process that may be used to form high aspect ratio features (>10:1) at high rates (2-4 μm/min). The etching may be carried out to full wafer thickness using silicon dioxide or photoresist as a mask, and may conveniently stop on oxide interlayers similar to the layer 103. The minimum feature size that can be etched through a full-wafer thickness (500 μm) is typically smaller than can be obtained by mechanical drilling.
It will be appreciated that the stacked assembly of the three features 105, 109 and 202 now form a set of three cylindrical or semi-cylindrical surfaces, which can provide a three-element electrostatic lens that can act on a separately provided ion stream 308 passing through the assembly. Such a lens arrangement may be configured as an Einzel lens, with the associated benefits of such arrangements as will be appreciated by those skilled in the art. It will also be appreciated that the three features 204, 205 and 110 now form a continuous passageway through which a gas stream 309 may flow, intercepting the ion stream 308 in the central cavity 310. The intersection, although shown schematically as being one where the two channels are mutually perpendicular to one another is, it will be appreciated, an example of the type of arrangement that may be used. Alternatives may include arrangements specifically configured to enable a generation of a vortex or any other rotational mixing of the two streams through the angular presentation of one channel to the other.
It will be appreciated that the combined assembly now provides a continuous passageway for the gas stream 408 that starts and ends in the metal layer, in which connections to an additional inlet and outlet pipe may easily be formed by conventional machining. It will also be appreciated that the ion stream 409 now passes through the metal substrate, which is now sufficiently robust to form part of the enclosure of a vacuum chamber. It will also be appreciated that with the addition of such a chamber, the three regions 410, 411 and 412 may be maintained at different pressures.
The flux of ions is provided from a capillary 507 containing a liquid that is (for example) derived from a liquid chromatography system or capillary electrophoresis system in the form of analyte molecules dissolved in a solvent. The flux of ions is generated as a spray 508 by providing a suitable electric field near the capillary. In addition to the desired analyte ions, which it is desired to pass as an ion stream 509 into the vacuum chamber, the spray typically contains neutrals and droplets with a high concentration of solvent.
Ions and charged droplets in the spray may be concentrated into the inlet of the assembly by the first lens element carrying the proud feature 510, which is maintained at a suitable potential by one of the connections 511 provided on external surfaces of the first, second or third wafers. Entering the central chamber 504, the ion velocities may be thermalised and the spray may be desolvated by collision with the gas molecules contained therein. The gas stream may be heated to promote desolvation, for example by RF heating caused by applying an alternating voltage between two adjacent lens elements and causing an alternating current to flow through the silicon. Alternative mechanisms of achieving heating of the stream may include a heating prior to entry into the interface device where for example it is considered undesirable to actively heat the materials of the interface device.
Ions may be further concentrated at the outlet of the assembly by the second lens element and the third element carrying the proud feature 512, which are also maintained at suitable potentials by the remaining connections 511.
It will be appreciated that more complex assemblies of a similar type may be constructed. For example,
Heretofore an interface component in accordance with the teaching of the invention has been described with reference to an exemplary arrangement where a laminated silicon interface is provided to allow transport of an ion stream between atmospheric pressure and vacuum through a pair of orifices sandwiching a chamber held at intermediate pressure.
As was described above, such an interface may be constructed from a pair of silicon substrates. Where so constructed, the outer substrate may be fabricated from a silicon-oxide-silicon bilayer, while the inner substrate may be provided in the form of a silicon monolayer. As was described wither reference to
Such an arrangement may be successfully used to effect ion transmission and to obtain mass spectra from the resulting ion stream. The arrangement and performance may however benefit from one or more modifications, the specifics of which will be described as follows.
As will be appreciated from the teaching of the invention most features of the interface component may be fabricated using standard patterning, etching and metallisation processes, as will be familiar to those skilled in the art.
The arrangement of
To assemble such an arrangement, each of the two substrates 701, 706 may be stacked on the flange 705 and then secured by a melting of the solder 704, as shown in
In the arrangement of
In the arrangement of
In the arrangement of
It is generally difficult to construct features with well-controlled, continually varying slopes using standard microfabrication processes such as dry etching. However, features with approximately correct slopes may be constructed by crystal plane etching. In silicon, the (111) planes can be shown to etch much more slowly than all other planes in certain wet etchants, for example potassium hydroxide. These planes lie at an angle cos−1(1/√3)=54.73° to the surface of a (100) oriented wafer, and provide a natural boundary to etched features. The (211) planes also etch relatively slowly.
A proud feature 800 whose surfaces consist of four (111) planes and four (211) planes as shown in
It will also be appreciated that there is considerable scope for variations in layout and dimension in the arrangements above. For example, it is not necessary for the ion path to be co-linear from input to output, and reduced contamination of the vacuum system may follow from adopting a staggered ion path so that no line of sight exists. Similarly, it is not necessary for both of the orifices to be circular in geometry, and reduced contamination may again arise from (for example) the combination of a first circular orifice with a second circular annular orifice.
It will also be appreciated that the silicon parts may be fabricated in a batch process so that the assembly may be provided as a low-cost disposable element. Finally, it will be appreciated that because the entire vacuum interface is now reduced in size, a plurality of similar elements may be constructed as an array on a common substrate. The array may then provide interfaces for a plurality of electrospray capillaries.
It will be understood that what has been described herein are exemplary embodiments of microengineered interface components which are provided to illustrate the teaching of the invention yet are not to be construed in any way limiting except as may be deemed necessary in the light of the appended claims. Whereas the invention has been described with reference to a specific number of layers it will be understood that any stack arrangement comprising a plurality of individually patterned semiconducting layers with adjacent layers being separated from one another by insulating layers, and orifice defined within the layers defining a conduit through the stack should be considered as falling within the scope of the claimed invention.
Within the context of the present invention the term microengineered or microengineering is intended to define the fabrication of three dimensional structures and devices with dimensions in the order of microns. It combines the technologies of microelectronics and micromachining. Microelectronics allows the fabrication of integrated circuits from silicon wafers whereas micromachining is the production of three-dimensional structures, primarily from silicon wafers. This may be achieved by removal of material from the wafer or addition of material on or in the wafer. The attractions of microengineering may be summarised as batch fabrication of devices leading to reduced production costs, miniaturisation resulting in materials savings, miniaturisation resulting in faster response times and reduced device invasiveness. Wide varieties of techniques exist for the microengineering of wafers, and will be well known to the person skilled in the art. The techniques may be divided into those related to the removal of material and those pertaining to the deposition or addition of material to the wafer. Examples of the former include:
These techniques can be combined with wafer bonding to produce complex three-dimensional, examples of which are the interface devices provided by the present invention.
While the device of the invention has been described as an interface component it will be appreciated that such a device could be provided either separate to or integral with the other components to which it provides an interface between. By using an interface component it is possible to remove impurities or other unwanted components of the emitted spray material from the capillary needle conventionally used with mass spectrometer system.
It will be further understood that whereas the present invention has been described with reference to an exemplary application, that of interfacing an ionization source—specifically an electrospray ionization source—with a mass spectrometry system, that interface components according to the teaching of the invention could be used in any application that requires a coupling of an ion beam from an ionization source provided at a first pressure to another device that is provided at a second pressure. Typically this second pressure will be lower than the first pressure but it is not intended to limit the present invention in any way except as may be deemed necessary in the light of the appended claims.
Where the words “upper”, “lower”, “top”, bottom, “interior”, “exterior” and the like have been used, it will be understood that these are used to convey the mutual arrangement of the layers relative to one another and are not to be interpreted as limiting the invention to such a configuration where for example a surface designated a top surface is not above a surface designated a lower surface.
Furthermore, the words comprises/comprising when used in this specification are to specify the presence of stated features, integers, steps or components but does not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, integers, steps, components or groups thereof.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
GB0611221.3 | Jun 2006 | GB | national |
GB0620256.8 | Oct 2006 | GB | national |