The present disclosure relates to mass spectrometry and, in particular, to a system that will enable massively parallel mass selective ion ejection.
Ion trap mass spectrometers have conventionally operated with a three-dimensional (3D) quadrupole field formed, for example, using a ring electrode and two end caps. In this configuration, the minimum of the potential energy well created by the radio-frequency (RF) field distribution is positioned in the center of the ring. Because the kinetic energy of ions injected into an ion trap decreases in collisions with buffer gas molecules, usually helium, the injected ions naturally localize at the minimum of the potential well. As has been shown using laser tomography imaging, the ions in these conventionally constructed ion traps congregate in a substantially spherical distribution, which is typically smaller than about 1 millimeter in diameter. The result is a degradation of performance of the device when attempting to trap large numbers of ions, due to space charge effects.
As one possible solution to this problem, quadrupole mass spectrometers having a two-dimensional quadrupole electric field were introduced in order to expand the ion storage area from a small sphere into an extended cylindrical column. An example of this type of spectrometer is provided in U.S. Pat. No. 5,420,425 to Bier, et al. The Bier, et al. patent discloses a substantially quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer with an enlarged or elongated ion occupied volume. The ion trap has a space charge limit that is proportional to the length of the device. After collision relaxation, ions occupy an extended region coinciding with the axis of the device. The Bier, et al. patent discloses a two-dimensional ion trap, which can be straight, or of a circular or curved shape, and also an ellipsoidal three-dimensional ion trap with increased ion trapping capacity. Ions are mass-selectively ejected from the ion trap through an elongated aperture corresponding to the elongated storage area.
Though increased ion storage volume is provided by the ion trap geometry of the Bier, et al. patent, the efficiency and versatility of the mass spectrometer suffer, for example, due to the elongated slit and subsequent focusing of the ions required after ejection. In addition, the storage volume is limited by practical considerations, since the length of the spectrometer must be increased in order to increase the ion storage volume.
Various types of mass analyzers for acquiring the ions ejected from such traps are known in the art. Time-of-flight (TOF) instruments acquire spectra at very high frequency. However, one limiting factor of such TOF instruments is that they must be operated in tandem with sequential instruments, such as ion traps or quadrupoles, which are frequently used for selecting the precursor ions. While selecting the species of interest for MS/MS analysis, usually other species present in the ion beam generated from a given sample are rejected, and, thus, they are lost for the analysis. This decreases the total efficiency of analysis with this type of instrument.
Thus, most mass spectrometric (MS) analyses are performed in sequential mode, wherein various species in a sample are selected and interrogated one after another. As a consequence of the finite time needed to examine each species in turn, sequential mode MS suffers from inescapable limitations in sensitivity, speed and ability to analyze all ions, especially when the composition of the ion beam is complex and rapidly changing. These limitations have kept vast tracts of biology and biomedicine, including, for example, deep single cell proteome analysis, out of reach of the current MS technology.
One solution that has been proposed is to split the ion current into N independent m/z channels. This solution is described in commonly owned U.S. Pat. No. 8,637,817 to Krutchinsky et al. The Krutchinsky et al. patent discloses an efficient and versatile ion trap for use in a mass spectrometer, which provides both good ion storage volume and efficient ejection of selected ions, as well as splitting the incoming ions beam into sub-beams containing ions from non-overlapping m/z regions. Simultaneous analysis of ions in these parallel beams results in improved sensitivity, speed and dynamic range, thus overcoming the technical barriers inherent to current commercial mass spectrometers that operate largely in sequential mode.
The present disclosure sets forth improvements on the invention disclosed in the Krutchinsky et al. patent to provide a versatile and efficient system and instrumentation device for parallel mass-to-charge filtering in mass spectrometry.
The disclosure is directed to a multi-beam time-of-flight mass spectrometer system including a high-capacity and versatile ion trap device that transmits ions through a multiplicity of trap outputs according to their m/z values, (i.e., splitting the stream of incoming ions, in real time and without loss, into concurrent sub-beams containing ions with specified and non-overlapping m/z values). Realization of this mode of operation will allow ions from these concurrent beams to be further analyzed in parallel by a position sensitive detector, or an array of mass spectrometers, (e.g. ion traps), or a single multi-beam time-of-flight analyzer with a position sensitive detector.
In one aspect of the present invention a parallel multi-beam mass spectrometer is provided. The parallel multi-beam mass spectrometer includes an ion trap and a single multi-beam time-of-flight analyzer. The trap has a plurality of alternating electrodes configured to form a plurality of quadrupoles defining a surface of the trap, wherein at least two of the plurality of quadrupoles are configured as mass filters for selective ejection of concurrent parallel beams of ions from the trap in respective predetermined ion mass-to-charge windows. The single multi-beam time-of-flight analyzer has a position sensitive detector for simultaneously receiving and analyzing the concurrent parallel beams of ions or a multiplicity of detectors, each one receiving and detecting a single ion beam.
The parallel multi-beam mass spectrometer further preferably includes a plurality of collision cells, each collision cell communicating with one of the at least two of the plurality of quadrupoles configured as mass filters, wherein the collision cells fragment concurrent parallel beams of ions.
The single multi-beam time-of-flight analyzer further preferably includes a time-of-flight accelerator column for pulsing the concurrent parallel beams of ions into respective time of flight paths. The single multi-beam time-of-flight analyzer further preferably includes a time-of-flight mirror for orthogonal reflection of the concurrent parallel beams of ions.
In one aspect of the invention, the plurality of quadrupoles configured as mass filters include a first quadrupole and a second quadrupole, wherein the first quadrupole is defined by four alternating electrodes configured for application of respective opposite polarities of a first RF signal, and the second quadrupole is defined by four alternating electrodes configured for application of respective opposite polarities of a second RF signal. As a result, the first quadrupole transmits ions with a first range of mass to charge values and the second quadrupole transmits ions with a second range of mass-to-charge values different than the first range.
It is possible for the first and second quadrupoles to share two electrodes whereby the first and second quadrupoles spatially overlap. In this embodiment, the two shared electrodes are segmented to permit application of two different RF signals to the same two shared electrodes.
In one aspect of the present invention, the amplitudes of the RF and DC components of the first and second RF signals are adjusted to attract and transmit different respective mass-to-charge ranges of ions. The first and second RF signals can be formed by square pulses or the first and second RF signals can take a broadband excitation waveform designed to excite ions in all mass-to-charge ranges except those that are to be transmitted through the respective first and second quadrupoles.
In another aspect of the present invention, a method for parallel multi-beam mass spectrometry is provided. The method generally includes grouping alternating electrodes defining a surface of an ion trap into a plurality of quadrupoles, configuring at least two of the plurality of quadrupoles as respective mass filters for selective ejection of concurrent parallel beams of ions from the trap in predetermined ion mass-to-charge windows, transmitting the concurrent parallel beams of ions to a single multi-beam time of flight analyzer and simultaneously analyzing the concurrent parallel beams of ions with a position sensitive detector.
In a preferred embodiment, the method further includes fragmenting the concurrent parallel beams of ions with at least one collision cell disposed between the ion trap and the time-of-flight analyzer. The method further preferably includes pulsing the concurrent parallel beams of ions into respective time of flight paths with the time-of-flight analyzer and orthogonally reflecting the concurrent parallel beams of ions with a time-of-flight mirror of the time-of-flight analyzer.
In one aspect of the invention, the step of configuring at least two of the plurality of quadrupoles as respective mass filters includes applying respective opposite polarities of a first RF signal to alternating electrodes of a first quadrupole of the at least two of the plurality of quadrupoles and applying respective opposite polarities or a second RF signal to alternating electrodes of a second quadrupole of the at least two of the plurality of quadrupoles, the second RF signal being different than the first RF signal, wherein the first quadrupole transmits ions with a first range of mass-to-charge values and the second quadrupole transmits ions with a second mass-to-charge values different than the first range.
The first and second quadrupoles may share two electrodes whereby both the first RF signal and the second RF signal are applied to the two shared electrodes. In this case, the two shared electrodes are segmented to permit application of both the first RF signal and the second RF signal.
Features of the disclosure will become apparent from the following detailed description considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. It is to be understood, however, that the drawings are designed as an illustration only and not as a definition of the limits of this disclosure.
The following sections describe embodiments of the present disclosure. It should be apparent to those skilled in the art that the described embodiments with accompanying figures provided herein are illustrative only of the invention and not limiting, having been presented by way of example only.
A multi-quadrupole ion trap (MultiQ-IT) device of the prior art is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 8,637,817, the specification of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety for all purposes. As disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 8,637,817, and shown in
For example, an ion trap in the form of a cube of dimensions 10 cm×10 cm×10 cm, an example of which is provided in
The electrodes of the ion trap device are confined to the surfaces of the cube in
Quadrupoles are commonly known for use as ion guides and/or mass filters. Each pair of adjacent rods in a quadrupole is connected to a positive or a negative RF potential of suitable magnitude and frequency for the particular application, so that direct neighbors are maintained at opposing polarities or phases with the same amplitude. This arrangement is known to provide radial confinement of ions around a central axis of the rod set forming the quadrupole.
In ion traps, this same pattern of alternating RF signals is applied to adjacent electrodes formed on each surface of a regular polyhedral structure enclosing an ion containment region. In the case of the cube-shaped ion trap 50, for example, a total of 294 quadrupoles are formed, which surround the ion containment region 54. By appropriate application of alternating RF phases, a steep potential barrier can be formed at the surfaces of the cube with a shallow well towards the center of the device that will effectively repel positive and negative ions towards the center of the device and trap ions inside the volume 54. In this way, a very large number of ions with a wide range of masses can be trapped in the device.
The ion trap device of the prior art can also include plate electrodes 56 outside the surfaces 70 of the regular polyhedral structure of the device. To prevent ions from escaping the ion containment region along the axis of quadrupoles, where the RF field is small, a small DC potential can be applied to any number of the plate electrodes to repel the ions back towards the containment region 60. In various embodiments, a DC voltage is applied in the range of between about 0 V and about +1000 V, preferably in the range of between about +0.02 V to about +100 V to at least a portion of the plate electrodes to prevent, for example, positive ions from escaping.
Any of the plate electrodes 56 can include ports 58 to allow ions to be injected into the ion containment region 54, and/or for ejecting ions out of the ion containment region 54. To guide ions into the containment region 54, the two-dimensional array of rod-shaped electrodes on one of the surfaces of the cube can include a quadrupole ion guide 72 to guide ions into a containment volume and/or a quadrupole ion guide 74 to guide ions out of the containment volume.
By applying an RF voltage with a characteristic frequency corresponding to a particular ion mass range to the electrodes forming the surface of the ion trap cube, mass selective ion ejection can be achieved along the axes of the quadrupoles arranged on the containment surfaces. Similarly, the voltage and frequency of the RF signal applied to the rods of the quadrupole ion guides 72, 74 can be appropriately adjusted for ion guiding and/or for mass filtering for a particular mass-to-charge window. Accordingly, ions can be ejected in a mass-to-charge dependent manner through a port 58 in a plate electrode 56, for example, appropriately positioned to coincide with the region centered along the axis of the quadrupole 74.
The ion device can include a large number of quadrupoles. As shown in
Accordingly, a parallel mass spectrometer can include up to N3−(N−2)3−2 individual mass analyzers, one for each mass-to-charge window of ions ejected from each quadrupole for simultaneous parallel analysis of the ions stored in the device. Highly efficient parallel mass spectrometry free of losses associated with conventional sequential ion scanning can therefore be provided by implementing the ion device disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 8,637,817.
Referring to
The plate electrode 130 is preferably biased with a high DC voltage (e.g., about +10V) for containment of the injected ions in the containment region 126. Additional plates 132 can be biased at a small DC voltage, e.g., about +0.03V, for depletion of singly-charged ions. As discussed herein below, depletion of these singly-charged ions provides a mass spectrometer characterized by a high signal-to-noise ratio.
Mass selective ion ejection from embodiments of the ion trap device with multiple mass filtered outputs, such as the device 110, can be performed periodically or continuously along any or all of the N3−(N−2)3−2 quadrupole axes. The mass selective ion ejection, or filtering, can be performed according to methods known in the art, such as by mass resonance ion ejection, or using resonance ion injection into each quadrupole axis (channel) by supplying wide band resonance excitation containing all frequencies that excite all ions in the trap except the ions characterized by a particular m/z. These ions pass through the quadrupole to be detected at the exit using multiple ion detectors, or using a large array detector, or in the case of analysis of chemical and biological assays, a “soft-landed” species device.
In one or more embodiments of the present invention, one specific method for selectively ejecting ions from an ion trap 112, as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 8,637,817, is schematically shown in
Specifically,
Ions that cannot make it through a given quadrupole 52a, 52b, 52c, 52d that is set to transmit a given range of m/z values ions will be repelled back into the trap 112 by the quadrupole fringing fields. These repelled ions will further explore the trap from the inside until they find the exit 115a, 115b, 115c, 115d that is specifically designed to transmit them. It has been found that ion trajectories become destabilized as they approach a given quadrupole along the quadrupole axes under conditions that prohibit their exit, providing a mechanism for ion containment within the trap 112.
It is also possible to use RF signals formed by square pulses (not shown), wherein the duration of the positive and negative part of the pulses can be adjusted so as to keep the duty cycle between 0.38 and 0.5, for example. When the duty cycle is set to 0.5, the quadrupole operates in the RF-only mode transmitting a wide range of ions. However, when the duty cycle is set close to 0.38 the quadrupole will transmit a narrow range of ions (˜1 Th), centered on a m/z value determined only by the amplitude of the RF signal. These features provide a convenient “digital” way to control multiple mass filters of the ion trap because the filtered value of m/z depends on the amplitude of the RF signal (at a given RF frequency), while the duty cycle sets the width of the transmission window.
Another possible mode of operation involves mixing into the major RF signal a specially designed broadband excitation waveform designed to excite all ions in the observable m/z range except those that are to be transmitted through a given quadrupole exit. This specially designed waveform can be provided by subtracting a specific frequency from a “white noise” spectrum of frequencies, wherein the specific frequency subtracted from the spectrum is characteristic for the ions to be transmitted through a given quadrupole exit.
Turning now to
The ion traps 112 shown in
It is further conceivable that more than one ion trap 112 can be connected in series to increase the signal-to-noise ratio by a factor of XN, where X is the signal-to-noise improvement of a single ion trap and N is the number of ion traps in series. In this embodiment, the ions are subjected to a 2nd 3rd, . . . Nth round of ion selection and fragmentation prior to mass analysis.
Such embodiment can yield a wealth of information, including the identity of macromolecular species involved in specific biological processes, the identity and location of chemical modifications and processing events on macromolecules, the interaction of specific macromolecules, single cell proteome analysis, chemical crosslinking data that are valuable for structural modeling of macromolecular complexes, the stoichiometry of macromolecular complexes, as well as quantitative aspects of many cellular processes.
In
In
In
As described above, the voltage and frequency of the RF signal applied to the electrodes of a plurality of quadrupoles arranged on the trap 112 can be individually and appropriately adjusted so that each ion guide 74 can guide ions out of the trap 112 based on a particular mass-to-charge window. Thus, ions from an ion source (not shown) are split in real time in concurrent sub-beams 20 containing ions in ten non-overlapping m/z regions.
These beams 20 are preferably directed to respective collision cells 22, where they can be fragmented to create ten concurrent fragmentation channels 24.
The resulting fragment channels 24 from each collision cell 22 are simultaneously sent to a single time-of-flight analyzer 26, which simultaneously analyzes the fragment ions in different m/z ranges. The single time-of-flight analyzer 26 preferably includes a time-of-flight accelerator column 28, (which pulses and accelerates ions into the time of flight path), a time-of-flight mirror 30 and a position sensitive detector 32.
All ions entering the time-of-flight analyzer 26 are pulsed toward the single position sensitive detector 32, or the multiple individual detectors. Their times-of-flight are measured from the instant of the applied pulse to the instants when they reach the detector. However, ions in the multiple parallel beams (either intact or fragments) need to be discerned from each other. This can be done using a separate detector for each concurrent beam. An alternative solution, according to the present invention, uses a “single” detector 32 that can recognize the position at which the ions from each beam strike (i.e., a detector that can detect both the arrival times of the ions and their positions). In a preferred embodiment, the concurrent beams should have clearly discernable positions on this position sensitive detector.
The time-of flight-analyzer 26 can be a conventional linear TOF analyzer, or a TOF analyzer with a mirror, commonly used in modern TOF mass analyzers to increase the resolution of such analyzers. In a preferred embodiment, an orthogonal injection TOF analyzer that accepts ions in an orthogonal direction to the TOF path is used. This is the most appropriate type of TOF analyzer for the present multibeam purpose, where each beam is continuous in time.
The term “time-of-flight” is used to describe a type of analyzer that measures the time that ions take to travel through a given time-of-flight. It is straightforward and common practice to deduce the m/z (mass to charge ratio) of ions from their measured times-of-flight (usually using known calibrants). As described above, in the style of TOF analyzer shown in
Thus, the ions in the channels 24 are analyzed in parallel in a single orthogonal reflection time-of-flight mass spectrometer, which separates ions into ten ion beams at the same time and detects the separated ions either in a position sensitive detector or in 10 separate detectors.
It should be apparent to those skilled in the art that the described embodiments of the present invention provided herein are illustrative only and not limiting, having been presented by way of example only. As described herein, all features disclosed in this description may be replaced by alternative features serving the same or similar purpose, unless expressly stated otherwise. Therefore, numerous other embodiments of the modifications thereof are contemplated as falling within the scope of the present invention as defined herein and equivalents thereto.
This application is a divisional application of U.S. application Ser. No. 15/734,808, filed Dec. 3, 2020, which is a national stage application of PCT/EP2019/035561 filed Jun. 5, 2019, which claims priority from U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 62/680,679, filed on Jun. 5, 2018, the specification of which is incorporated herein in its entirety for all purposes.
The research leading to the present invention was supported, at least in part, by NIH Grant No. PHS GM103314. Accordingly, the United States Government may have certain rights in the invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
62680679 | Jun 2018 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 15734808 | Dec 2020 | US |
Child | 17752099 | US |