Title: MagneticSector Mass Spectrometry
1Mass Spectroscopy Separation of Ions on the
Basis of Mass to Charge Ratio by Kymberly
Forrest, Olivia Gilbert, Nicole Griglione, and
Mary Jones
2Introduction
- Mass spectroscopy is an effective method for
determining the weight and structure of mixtures
of compounds. - It is advantageous to other methods of analysis
in its ability to separate and analyze mixtures
of compounds. - It is an extremely sensitive technique with
current levels of accuracy within the range of
one mass unit.
3Applications
- General analysis of inorganic, organic, and
bio-organic chemicals - Geological Sample dating
- Drug analysis and research
- Process studies in the petroleum, chemical, and
pharmaceutical industries - Surface analysis
- Structural resolution of proteins and genetic
material
4General Setup
- Common to all mass spectrometers are
- Sample Inlet (2) Ionization Source (3) Mass
Analyzer - (4) Ion Detector (5) Vacuum System
5Methods of Separation
- This presentation examines different types of
Mass Analyzers, which differ in the physical
properties they manipulate. - Magnetic, which depends on Voltage
- Time of Flight, which depends on Mass
- Electric Quadrupole, which depends on AC/DC
Currents - Common to these Mass Analyzers is the separation
of particles on the basis of mass to charge
ratios (m/q).
6Magnetic-Sector Mass Spectrometry
7Magnetic-Sector Mass Spectrometry
THEORY The ion source accelerates ions to a
kinetic energy given by KE ½ mv2 qV Where m
is the mass of the ion, v is its velocity, q is
the charge on the ion, and V is the applied
voltage of the ion optics.
8Magnetic-Sector Mass Spectrometry
- The ions enter the flight tube and are deflected
by the magnetic field, B. - Only ions of mass-to-charge ratio that have equal
centripetal and centrifugal forces pass through
the flight tube - mv2 /r BqV, where r is the radius of curvature
9Magnetic-Sector Mass Spectrometry
- mv2 /r BqV
- By rearranging the equation and eliminating the
velocity term using the previous equations, r
mv/qB 1/B(2Vm/q)1/2 - Therefore, m/q B2r2/(2V)
- This equation shows that the m/q ratio of the
ions that reach the detector can be varied by
changing either the magnetic field (B) or the
applied voltage of the ion optics (V).
10Magnetic-Sector Mass Spectrometry
In summary, by varying the voltage or magnetic
field of the magnetic-sector analyzer, the
individual ion beams are separated spatially and
each has a unique radius of curvature according
to its mass/charge ratio.
11Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry (TOF-MS)
INTRODUCTION
- Separates ions based on flight time
- Operates in pulsed mode
- Ions accelerated by an electric field
- Lighter ions reach the detector first
12Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry (TOF-MS)
THEORY
- KEqV when electrons are accelerated through an
electric field - KE of ion is ½mv2, so qV ½mv2 and velocity is
inversely proportional to mass - Transit time (t) is L/v, where L is drift tube
length and v is velocity - So tL/(2V/m/q)½ can be solved for charge-mass
ratio
13Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry (TOF-MS)
HOW ITS DONE
- Reflectron is series of rings or grids that
serves to focus ions to improve resolution - Exact values of L and V do not need to be known
if two or more ions of known mass are used as
mass calibration points - Produces a mass spectrum as a function of time
(can be measured every 10 nsec)
14Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry (TOF-MS)
ADVANTAGES
- Good for kinetic studies of fast reactions and
for use with gas chromatography to analyze peaks
from chromatograph - Can register molecular ions that decompose in the
flight tube
15Quadrupole Mass Analyzers
16Background InfoQuadrupole Mass Analyzers
- been in use since the 1950s
- most commonly used mass spec today
- sometimes referred to as mass filters because
ions of only a single mass to charge (m/q) ratio
pass through the apparatus - separate ions based on oscillations in an
electric field (the quadrupole field) using AC
and DC currents
17Benefits Quadrupole Mass Analyzers
easy to use simple construction fast low
cost can achieve unit to 0.1 m/q resolution
18More BenefitsQuadrupole Mass Analyzers
- tolerant of relatively poor vacuums (5 x
10-5torr), which make them well suited to
electrospray ionization (because these ions are
produced under atmospheric conditions) - quadrupoles are now capable of routinely
analyzing up to a m/q ratio of 3000, which is
useful in electrospray ionization of
biomolecules, which commonly produces a charge
distribution below m/z 3000
19Basis of Quadrupole Mass Filter
- consists of 4 parallel metal rods, or electrodes
- opposite electrodes have potentials of the same
sign - one set of opposite electrodes has applied
potential of UVcos(?t) - other set has potential of
- - UVcos?t
- U DC voltage, VAC voltage, ? angular velocity
of alternating voltage
20Operation of Quadrupole Mass Filter
- voltages applied to electrodes affect trajectory
of ions with the m/q ratio of interest as they
travel down the center of the four rods - these ions pass through the electrode system
- ions with other m/z ratios are thrown out of
their original path - these ions are filtered out or lost to the walls
of the quadrupole, and then ejected as waste by a
vacuum system - in this manner the ions of interest are separated
21Obtaining A Spectrum Quadrupole Mass Analyzers
- a mass spectrum is obtained by varying the
voltages on the rods and monitoring which ions
pass through the filter - two methods for varying rod voltages
- vary ? while holding U and V constant
- vary U and V but keep the ratio U/V fixed
- remember U DC voltage, VAC voltage, ? angular
velocity of alternating voltage - The resolution is determined by the magnitude of
U/V ratio - beam currents for individual m/q ratios may be as
low as 10-13 A and so electron multipliers are
usually used
22ApplicationsQuadrupole Mass Analyzers
- partial pressure analyzers
- GC/MS
- upper atmosphere and space research
- separation of proteins and other biomolecules
with electrospray - plasma diagnostics
- multielement and isotopic analyses
23Summary
- Magnetic Mass Spectroscopy shows the
relationship between voltage and mass to charge
ratio - m/q B2r2/(2V)
- Time of Flight Mass Spectroscopy shows the
relationship between tube time and mass to charge
ratio - m/q 2Vt2/L2
- Electric Quadrupole shows the relationship
between AC/DC currents and mass to ratios. -
24Sources
Dean, John A., et al. Instrumental Methods of
Analysis. Belmont, CA Wadsworth Company, 1988.
465-485. De Laeter, John R. Toronto John Wiley
and Sons, Inc., 2001. 68-70 Sparkman, O. David.
Mass Spec Desk Reference. Pittsburg Global
View, 2000. 47-48. http//elchem.kaist.ac.kr/vt/c
hem-ed/ms/ms-intro.htm http//masspec.scripps.edu/
information/intro/ http//ms.mc.vanderbilt.edu/tut
orials/ms/ms.htm http//www.abrf.org/ABRFNews/1996
/September1996/sep96iontrap.html http//www.chem.a
rizona.edu/massspec/intro_html/intro.html