US20070023635A1 - Mass spectrometer and method of mass spectrometry - Google Patents

Mass spectrometer and method of mass spectrometry Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20070023635A1
US20070023635A1 US11/513,185 US51318506A US2007023635A1 US 20070023635 A1 US20070023635 A1 US 20070023635A1 US 51318506 A US51318506 A US 51318506A US 2007023635 A1 US2007023635 A1 US 2007023635A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
ions
mobility spectrometer
ion mobility
ion
mass
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
US11/513,185
Inventor
Robert Bateman
John Hoyes
James Langridge
Jason Wildgoose
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from GB0115203A external-priority patent/GB0115203D0/en
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US11/513,185 priority Critical patent/US20070023635A1/en
Publication of US20070023635A1 publication Critical patent/US20070023635A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J49/00Particle spectrometers or separator tubes
    • H01J49/26Mass spectrometers or separator tubes
    • H01J49/34Dynamic spectrometers
    • H01J49/40Time-of-flight spectrometers
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N27/00Investigating or analysing materials by the use of electric, electrochemical, or magnetic means
    • G01N27/62Investigating or analysing materials by the use of electric, electrochemical, or magnetic means by investigating the ionisation of gases, e.g. aerosols; by investigating electric discharges, e.g. emission of cathode
    • G01N27/622Ion mobility spectrometry
    • G01N27/624Differential mobility spectrometry [DMS]; Field asymmetric-waveform ion mobility spectrometry [FAIMS]
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J49/00Particle spectrometers or separator tubes
    • H01J49/004Combinations of spectrometers, tandem spectrometers, e.g. MS/MS, MSn
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J49/00Particle spectrometers or separator tubes
    • H01J49/26Mass spectrometers or separator tubes
    • H01J49/34Dynamic spectrometers
    • H01J49/42Stability-of-path spectrometers, e.g. monopole, quadrupole, multipole, farvitrons
    • H01J49/4205Device types
    • H01J49/421Mass filters, i.e. deviating unwanted ions without trapping
    • H01J49/4215Quadrupole mass filters

Definitions

  • Mass spectrometry has firmly established itself as the primary technique for identifying proteins due to its unparalleled speed, sensitivity and specificity. Strategies can involve either analysis of the intact protein, or more commonly digestion of the protein using a specific protease that cleaves at predictable residues along the peptide backbone. This provides smaller stretches of peptide sequence that are more amenable to analysis via mass spectrometry.
  • the mass spectrometry technique providing the highest degree of specificity and sensitivity is Electrospray ionisation (“ESI”) interfaced to a tandem mass spectrometer.
  • ESI Electrospray ionisation
  • These experiments involve separation of the complex digest mixture by microcapillary liquid chromatography with on-line mass spectral detection using automated acquisition modes whereby conventional MS and MS/MS spectra are collected in a data dependant manner.
  • This information can be used directly to search databases for matching sequences leading to identification of the parent protein.
  • This approach can be used to identify proteins that are present at low endogenous concentrations.
  • the limiting factor for identification of the protein is not the quality of the MS/MS spectrum produced but is the initial discovery of the multiply charged peptide precursor ion in the MS mode.
  • FIG. 1 shows a typical conventional mass spectrum and illustrates how doubly charged species may be obscured amongst a singly charged background. A method whereby the chemical noise is reduced so that the mass spectrometer can more easily target peptide related ions would be highly advantageous for the study of protein digests.
  • a known method used to favour the detection of multiply charged species over singly charged species is to use an Electrospray ionisation orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser (“ESI-oaTOF”).
  • the orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser counts the arrival of ions using a Time to Digital Converter (“TDC”) which has a discriminator threshold.
  • TDC Time to Digital Converter
  • the voltage pulse of a single ion must be high enough to trigger the discriminator and so register the arrival of an ion.
  • the detector producing the voltage may be an electron multiplier or a Microchannel Plate detector (“MCP”). These detectors are charge sensitive so the size of signal they produce increases with increasing charge state. Discrimination in favour of higher charge states can be accomplished by increasing the discriminator voltage level, lowering the detector gain, or a combination of both.
  • FIG. 2 ( a ) shows a mass spectrum obtained with normal detector gain
  • FIG. 2 ( b ) shows a comparable mass spectrum obtained with a reduced detector gain.
  • An important disadvantage of lowering the detector gain (or of increasing the discriminator level) is that the sensitivity is lowered. As can be seen from the ordinate axes of FIG. 2 ( a ) and (b), the sensitivity is reduced by a factor of ⁇ 4 when a lower detector gain is employed. Using this method it is also impossible to pick out an individual charge state. Instead, the best that can be achieved is a reduction of the efficiency of detection of lower charge states with respect to higher charge states.
  • MALDI Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption Ionisation
  • a method of mass spectrometry comprising: providing a pulse of ions and performing the following steps before providing another pulse of ions: (a) temporally separating at least some of the ions according to their ion mobility in a first device; (b) mass filtering at least some of the ions according to their mass to charge ratio in a second device; and (c) progressively varying a mass filtering characteristic of the second device so that ions having a first charge state are onwardly transmitted in preference to ions having a second different charge state.
  • the preferred embodiment is particularly advantageous in that it allow ions with a chosen charge state to be selected from a mixture of ions having differing charge states. Another advantage is that sensitivity for this technique is greater than the known discriminator level technique as the detector can be run at full gain and all ions present may be counted.
  • multiply charged ions (which may include doubly, triply and quadruply charged ions and ions having five or more charges) may be preferentially selected and transmitted whilst the intensity of singly charged ions may be reduced.
  • any desired charged state or states may be selected. For example, two or more multiply charged states may be transmitted.
  • the first device preferably comprises an ion mobility spectrometer or other ion mobility device.
  • Ions in an ion mobility spectrometer may be subjected to an electric field in the presence of a buffer gas so that different species of ion acquire different velocities and are temporally separated according to their ion mobility.
  • the mobility of an ion in an ion mobility spectrometer typically depends inter alia upon its mass and its charge. Heavy ions with one charge tend to have lower mobilities than light ions with one charge. Also an ion of a particular mass to charge ratio with one charge tends to have a lower mobility than an ion with the same mass to charge ratio but carrying two (or more) charges.
  • the ion mobility spectrometer may be similar to a known ion mobility spectrometer comprising a drift tube together with one or more electrodes for maintaining an axial DC voltage gradient along at least a portion of the drift tube.
  • the ion mobility spectrometer may comprise a Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer (“FAIMS”).
  • FIMS Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer
  • a FAIMS may comprise two axially aligned inner cylinders surrounded by a long outer cylinder. The outer cylinder and a shorter inner cylinder are preferably held at the same electrical potential.
  • a longer inner cylinder may have a high frequency high voltage asymmetric waveform applied to it, thereby establishing an electric field between the inner and outer cylinders.
  • a compensation DC voltage is also applied to the longer inner cylinder.
  • a FAIMS acts like a mobility filter and may operate at atmospheric pressure.
  • a new form of ion mobility spectrometer comprising a plurality of electrodes having apertures wherein a DC voltage gradient is maintained across at least a portion of the ion mobility spectrometer and at least some of the electrodes are connected to an AC or RF voltage supply.
  • the new form of ion mobility spectrometer is particularly advantageous in that the addition of an AC or RF voltage to the electrodes (which may be ring like or otherwise annular) results in radial confinement of the ions passing through the ion mobility spectrometer. Radial confinement of the ions results in higher ion transmission compared with conventional ion mobility spectrometers of the drift tube type.
  • the second device may preferably take one of two main forms.
  • the first main preferred embodiment uses a quadrupole rod set mass filter and the second main preferred embodiment uses an axial time of flight drift region and a synchronised pusher electrode.
  • the quadrupole mass filter may be operated as a high pass mass to charge ratio filter so as to transmit substantially only ions having a mass to charge ratio greater than a minimum value.
  • multiply charged ions can be preferentially transmitted compared to singly charged ions (i.e. doubly, triply, quadruply and ions having five or more charges may be transmitted whilst singly charged ions are attenuated).
  • the quadrupole mass filter may be operated as a band pass mass to charge ratio filter so as to substantially transmit only ions having a mass to charge ratio greater than a minimum value and smaller than a maximum value.
  • This embodiment is particularly advantageous in that multiply charged ions of a single charge state e.g. triply charged, may be preferentially transmitted whilst ions having any other charge state are relatively attenuated.
  • ions having two or more neighbouring charge states e.g. doubly and triply charged ions
  • may be transmitted and all other charge states may be attenuated.
  • non-neighbouring charge states are selected (e.g. doubly and quadruply charged ions).
  • the quadrupole mass filter is preferably scanned so that the minimum mass to charge ratio cut-off is progressively increased during a cycle (which is defined as the period between consecutive pulses of ions being admitted into the ion mobility spectrometer).
  • the quadrupole mass filter may be scanned in a substantially continuous (i.e. smooth) manner or alternatively the quadruple mass filter may be scanned in a substantially stepped manner.
  • the second device may comprise a drift region, preferably free of any buffer gas and preferably an axial drift region, having an axis and an injection electrode for injecting at least some ions in a direction substantially orthogonal to the axis.
  • the injection electrode may comprise a pusher and/or puller electrode of an orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser.
  • a particularly preferred feature is to provide an ion trap upstream of the drift region.
  • This ion trap is separate to an ion trap which may be provided preferably upstream of the ion mobility spectrometer.
  • the ion trap may preferably store and periodically release ions so that a pulsed (rather than a continuous) source of ions is admitted or otherwise inputted in to the drift region.
  • the injection electrode is arranged to inject ions a predetermined period of time after ions have first been released from the ion trap upstream of the drift region. The period of time is set so that only ions having a desired mass to charge ratio or a mass to charge ratio within a desired range are substantially injected by the injection electrode in an orthogonal direction and are hence onwardly transmitted.
  • a single packet of ions is released from the ion trap and then the predetermined time delay is slightly increased.
  • the process of increasing the time delay may be repeated a number of times (e.g. 40-50 times) during one cycle of ions being input into the ion mobility spectrometer.
  • a number of packets of ions may be repeatedly released from the ion trap before the predetermined time delay is progressively increased.
  • the process of increasing the time delay may be repeated a number of times during one cycle.
  • the ion source may be a pulsed ion source such as a Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption Ionisation (“MALDI”) ion source.
  • the pulsed ion source may alternatively comprise a Laser Desorption Ionisation ion source which is not matrix assisted.
  • a continuous ion source may be used in which case an ion trap for storing ions and periodically releasing ions is also preferably provided.
  • Continuous ion sources which may be used include Electrospray, Atmospheric Pressure Chemical Ionisation (“APCI”), Electron Impact (“EI”), Atmospheric Pressure Photon Ionisation (“APPI”) and Chemical Ionisation (“CI”) ion sources.
  • APCI Atmospheric Pressure Chemical Ionisation
  • EI Electron Impact
  • APPI Atmospheric Pressure Photon Ionisation
  • CI Chemical Ionisation
  • Other continuous or pseudo-continuous ion sources may also be used.
  • the mass spectrometer may be a Fourier Transform mass spectrometer or a Fourier Transform Ion Cyclotron Resonance mass spectrometer.
  • a collision cell may be provided in both the main preferred embodiments. In one mode of operation at least some ions entering the collision cell are caused to fragment.
  • An orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser is particularly preferred for both main preferred embodiments, although another type of mass analyser such as a quadrupole mass analyser or a 3D ion trap are also contemplated.
  • a method of mass spectrometry comprising: providing a pulse of ions; separating at least some of the ions according to their ion mobility in an ion mobility spectrometer; using a mass filter having a variable mass to charge ratio cut-off to mass filter at least some of the ions; and progressively increasing the mass to charge ratio cut-off in synchronisation with the ion mobility spectrometer.
  • a method of mass spectrometry comprising: separating at least some ions according to their ion mobility; mass filtering at least some ions; and arranging for multiply charged ions to be transmitted and for singly charged ions to be attenuated.
  • a method of reducing unwanted singly charged ions from a mass spectrum comprising: separating ions in an ion mobility spectrometer; passing the ions to a mass filter; and arranging the mass filter to have a mass to charge ratio cut-off which increases in time, the cut-off being predetermined based upon the known drift times of singly and doubly charged ions through the ion mobility spectrometer.
  • a method of mass spectrometry comprising: providing a pulse of ions; temporally separating at least some of the ions according to their ion mobility in an ion mobility spectrometer; providing a quadrupole rod set mass filter; and progressively increasing a mass to charge ratio cut-off of the mass filter so that multiply charged ions are onwardly transmitted in preference to singly charged ions.
  • a method of mass spectrometry comprising: providing a pulse of ions; temporally separating at least some of the ions according to their ion mobility in an ion mobility spectrometer; providing a drift region and an injection electrode; repeatedly pulsing ions into the drift region and causing the injection electrode to inject at least some of the ions in a substantially orthogonal direction after a delay time; and repeatedly increasing the delay time; wherein multiply charged ions are onwardly transmitted in preference to singly charged ions.
  • a mass spectrometer comprising: a first device for temporally separating ions according to their ion mobility; a second device for mass filtering at least some of the ions according to their mass to charge ratio; and a controller which is arranged to progressively vary a mass filtering characteristic of the second device so that ions having a first charge state are onwardly transmitted in preference to ions having a second charge state.
  • a mass spectrometer comprising: an ion mobility spectrometer; a quadrupole mass filter; and control means for progressively increasing the mass to charge ratio cut-off of the quadrupole mass filter in synchronisation with the ion mobility spectrometer.
  • a mass spectrometer comprising: an ion source; an ion mobility spectrometer for separating ions according to both their mass and charge state; a mass filter; control means for controlling the ion mobility spectrometer and the mass filter; and a mass analyser; wherein the control means is arranged to control the ion mobility spectrometer and the mass filter to attenuate ions having a first charge state so that there is a higher proportion of ions having a second charge state to ions having the first charge state downstream of the ion mobility spectrometer and the mass filter compared with upstream of the ion mobility spectrometer and the mass filter.
  • a mass spectrometer comprising: an ion source; a mass filter; an ion mobility spectrometer arranged downstream of the mass filter; and a mass analyser; wherein the mass filter and the ion mobility spectrometer are operated, in use, so that doubly and/or other multiply charged ions are transmitted to the mass analyser and singly charged ions are attenuated.
  • a mass spectrometer comprising: a continuous ion source; a first ion trap; an ion mobility spectrometer downstream of the first ion trap, the ion mobility spectrometer comprising a plurality of electrodes having apertures therein through which ions may be transmitted, wherein in use a DC voltage gradient is maintained across at least a portion of the ion mobility spectrometer and at least some of the electrodes are supplied with an AC or RF voltage, and wherein at least some of the electrodes are housed in a vacuum chamber maintained in use at a pressure within the range 0.1-10 mbar; a quadrupole mass filter downstream of the ion mobility spectrometer; and an orthogonal time of flight mass analyser comprising a pusher and/or puller electrode, orthogonal drift region and detector, the orthogonal time of flight mass analyser being arranged downstream of the quadrupole mass filter.
  • a mass spectrometer comprising: a continuous ion source; a first ion trap; an ion mobility spectrometer downstream of the first ion trap, the ion mobility spectrometer comprising a plurality of electrodes having apertures therein through which ions may be transmitted, wherein in use a DC voltage gradient is maintained across at least a portion of the ion mobility spectrometer and at least some of the electrodes are supplied with an AC or RF voltage, and wherein at least some of the electrodes are housed in a vacuum chamber maintained in use at a pressure within the range 0.1-10 mbar; a second ion trap downstream of the ion mobility spectrometer, the second ion trap comprising a plurality of electrodes having apertures through which ions may be transmitted, at least some of the electrodes being supplied in use with an AC or RF voltage; an axial drift region downstream of the second ion trap; and an orthogon
  • an ion mobility spectrometer for separating ions according to their ion mobility, the ion mobility spectrometer comprising: a plurality of electrodes having apertures wherein a DC voltage gradient is maintained across at least a portion of the ion mobility spectrometer and at least some of the electrodes are connected to an AC or RF voltage supply.
  • the ion mobility spectrometer preferably extends between two vacuum chambers so that an upstream section comprising a first plurality of electrodes having apertures is arranged in a vacuum chamber and a downstream section comprising a second plurality of electrodes having apertures is arranged in a further vacuum chamber, the vacuum chambers being separated by a differential pumping aperture.
  • At least some of the electrodes in the upstream section are preferably supplied with an AC or RF voltage having a frequency within the range 0.1-3.0 MHz.
  • a frequency of 0.5-1.1 MHz is preferred and a frequency of 780 kHz is particularly preferred.
  • the upstream section is preferably arranged to be maintained at a pressure within the range 0.1-10 mbar, preferably approximately 1 mbar.
  • At least some of the electrodes in the downstream section are preferably supplied with an AC or RF voltage having a frequency within the range 0.1-3.0 MHz.
  • a frequency of 1.8-2.4 MHz is preferred and a frequency of 2.1 MHz is particularly preferred.
  • the downstream section is preferably arranged to be maintained at a pressure within the range 10 ⁇ 3 -10 ⁇ 2 mbar.
  • the voltages applied to the electrodes in the upstream section may be such that a first DC voltage gradient is maintained in use across at least a portion of the upstream section and a second different DC voltage gradient may be maintained in use across at least a portion of the downstream section, the first DC voltage gradient being preferably greater than the second DC voltage gradient.
  • Either voltage gradient does not necessarily have to be linear and indeed a stepped voltage gradient is particularly preferred.
  • the ion mobility spectrometer comprises at least 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90 or 100 electrodes.
  • at least 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, 95% of the electrodes forming the ion mobility spectrometer have apertures which are of substantially the same size or area.
  • the second device comprises either a 2D ion trap (e.g. a rod set with front and/or rear trapping electrodes) or a 3D ion trap (e.g. a central ring electrode with front and rear endcap electrodes).
  • a 2D ion trap e.g. a rod set with front and/or rear trapping electrodes
  • a 3D ion trap e.g. a central ring electrode with front and rear endcap electrodes
  • a fourteenth aspect of the present invention there is provided a method of mass spectrometry, comprising:
  • FAIMS Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer
  • the FAIMS is scanned by varying a DC compensation voltage applied to the Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer.
  • the Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer is preferably selected from the group consisting of: (i) two parallel plates; and (ii) at least one inner cylinder and an outer cylinder.
  • a mass spectrometer comprising:
  • FAIMS Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer
  • a method of mass spectrometry comprising:
  • FAMMS Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer
  • At least some of the ions having the desired charge(s) which are onwardly transmitted are subsequently mass analysed.
  • a mass spectrometer comprising:
  • FAIMS Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer
  • a mass filter or ion trap operated so that at least some of the first group of ions having a desired charge state(s) are onwardly transmitted;
  • a controller for varying the Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer so that a second group of ions having a second mobility different to the first mobility are transmitted wherein the mass filter or ion trap is operated so that at least some of the second group of ions having a desired charge state(s) are onwardly transmitted.
  • a mass spectrometer comprising:
  • FAMMS Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer
  • mass filter may be a quadrupole, 2D or 3D ion trap or other mass filter.
  • FIG. 1 shows a conventional mass spectrum
  • FIG. 2 ( a ) shows a conventional mass spectrum obtained with normal detector gain
  • FIG. 2 ( b ) shows a comparable conventional mass spectrum obtained by lowering the detector gain
  • FIG. 3 ( a ) shows the known relationship between flight time in a time of flight mass analyser drift region versus drift time in an ion mobility spectrometer for various singly and doubly charged ions;
  • FIG. 3 ( b ) shows an experimentally determined relationship between the mass to charge ratio of a sample of ions and their drift time through an ion mobility spectrometer
  • FIG. 4 illustrates the general principle of filtering out singly charged ions according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 5 illustrates the general principle of selecting ions having a specific charge state according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 6 shows a first main preferred embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 7 ( a ) illustrates a preferred embodiment of an ion trap, ion gate and ion mobility spectrometer
  • FIG. 7 ( b ) illustrates the various DC voltages which may be applied to the ion trap, ion gate and ion mobility spectrometer
  • FIG. 7 ( c ) illustrates how the DC voltage applied to the ion gate may vary as a function of time
  • FIG. 7 ( d ) illustrates how a quadrupole mass filter may be scanned according to a preferred embodiment
  • FIG. 8 shows a second main preferred embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 9 shows how ions of differing mass to charge ratios become temporally separated in an axial drift region
  • FIG. 10 illustrates how the duty cycle of an ion trap-time of flight mass analyser increases to ⁇ 100% for a relatively narrow mass to charge ratio range compared with a typical maximum duty cycle of ⁇ 25% obtained by operating the time of flight mass analyser in a conventional manner;
  • FIG. 11 ( a ) shows a conventional mass spectrum
  • FIG. 11 ( b ) shows a comparable mass spectrum obtained according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention.
  • FIG. 12 ( a ) shows another conventional mass spectrum
  • FIG. 12 ( b ) shows a comparable mass spectrum obtained according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention.
  • FIG. 3 ( a ) shows the known relationship of flight time in a drift region of a time of flight mass analyser versus drift time in an ion mobility spectrometer for various singly and doubly charged ions.
  • An experimentally determined relationship between the mass to charge ratio of ions and their drift time through an ion mobility spectrometer is shown in FIG. 3 ( b ).
  • This relationship can be represented by an empirically derived polynomial expression.
  • a doubly charged ion having the same mass to charge ratio as a singly charged ion will take less time to drift through an ion mobility spectrometer compared with a singly charged ion.
  • the ordinate axis of FIG. 3 ( a ) is given as the flight time through the drift region of a time of flight mass analyser, it will be appreciated that this correlates directly with the mass to charge ratio of the ion.
  • the present inventors have recognised that if a mass filter is provided in combination with an ion mobility spectrometer, and if the mass filter is scanned (i.e. the transmitted range of mass to charge ratios is varied) in synchronisation with the drift of ions through the ion mobility spectrometer, then it is possible to arrange that only ions having a particular charge state (e.g. multiply charged ions) will be transmitted onwardly e.g. to a mass analyser.
  • ions having a particular charge state e.g. multiply charged ions
  • FIG. 4 illustrates an embodiment of the present invention.
  • the known data of FIG. 3 ( a ) and the experimentally derived data of FIG. 3 ( b ) can be interpreted such that all ions having the same charge state can be considered to fall within a distinct region or band of a 2D plot of mass to charge ratio versus drift time through an ion mobility spectrometer.
  • singly and doubly charged ions are shown as falling within distinct bands with an intermediate region therebetween where very few ions of interest are to be found.
  • Triply and quadruply charged ions etc. are not shown for ease of illustration only.
  • the large area below the “scan line” can be considered to represent singly charged ions and the other area can be considered to represent doubly charged ions.
  • a mass filter is provided which is synchronised with the operation of an ion mobility spectrometer.
  • ions may be emerging from the ion mobility spectrometer with various different mass to charge ratios. Those ions which emerge with a mass to charge ratio of approximately 1-790 are most likely to be singly charged ions whereas those ions emerging with a mass to charge ratio of approximately 1070-1800 are most likely to be doubly charged ions.
  • the mass filter may track the lower predetermined mass to charge ratio for doubly charged ions.
  • the cut-off mass to charge ratio may also lie for at least a portion of a cycle within the intermediate region which separates the regions comprising singly and doubly charged ions.
  • the minimum cut-off mass to charge ratio of the mass filter may also vary in a predetermined or random manner between the upper threshold of the singly charged ion region, the intermediate region and the lower threshold of the doubly charged ion region. It will also be appreciated that according to less preferred embodiments, the minimum cut-off mass to charge ratio may fall for at least a portion of time within the region considered to comprise either singly or doubly charged ions. In such circumstances, ions of a potentially unwanted charge state may still be transmitted, but the intensity of such ions will nonetheless be reduced.
  • the minimum cut-off mass to charge ratio is varied smoothly, and is preferably increased with time.
  • the minimum cut-off mass to charge ratio may be increased in a stepped manner.
  • FIG. 5 illustrates how the basic embodiment described in relation to FIG. 4 may be extended so that ions of a specific charge state(s) may be selected.
  • the mass filter is operated as a band pass mass to charge ratio filter so as to select ions of a specific charge state (in this case triply charged ions) in preference to ions having any other charge state.
  • the mass filter being operated in a band pass mode, is set so as to transmit ions having a mass to charge ratio>P and ⁇ Q, wherein P preferably lies on the upper threshold of the region containing doubly charged ions and Q preferably lies on the lower threshold of the region containing quadruply charged ions.
  • the upper and lower mass cut-offs P,Q are preferably smoothly increased with time so that at a later time T′, the lower mass to charge ratio cut-off of the band pass mass to charge ratio filter has been increased from P to P′ and the upper mass to charge ratio cut-off of the band pass mass to charge ratio filter has been increased from Q to Q′.
  • the upper and lower mass to charge ratio cut-offs do not need to follow the lower and upper thresholds of any particular charge state region, and according to the other embodiments the upper and lower cut-offs may fall within one or more intermediate regions and/or one or more of the bands in which ions having a particular charge state are to be found.
  • the lower and upper mass to charge ratio cut-offs may simply follow the thresholds of the region comprising doubly, triply, quadruply etc. charged ions.
  • two, three, four or more charge states may be selected in preference to any other charge state (e.g. doubly and triply charged ions may be transmitted).
  • Embodiments are also contemplated wherein non-neighbouring charge states (e.g. doubly and quadruply charged ions) are transmitted but not any other charge states.
  • FIG. 6 shows a first main preferred embodiment of the present invention.
  • An ion mobility spectrometer 4 is provided.
  • a pulse of ions is admitted to the ion mobility spectrometer 4 .
  • a continuous ion source e.g. Electrospray ion source, preferably generates a beam of ions 1 which are trapped in an ion trap 2 upstream of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 and are then pulsed out of the ion trap 2 by the application of an extraction voltage to an ion gate 3 at the exit of the ion trap 2 .
  • the ion trap 2 may comprise a quadrupole rod set having a length of approximately 75 mm. However, according to a more preferred embodiment the ion trap may comprise an ion tunnel comprising a plurality of electrodes having apertures therein. The apertures are preferably all the same size. In other embodiments at least 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90% or 95% of the electrodes have apertures which are substantially the same size.
  • the ion tunnel may preferably comprise approximately 50 electrodes. Adjacent electrodes are preferably connected to opposite phases of an AC or RF voltage supply so that ions are radially confined in use within the ion tunnel.
  • the voltage applied to the ion gate 3 may be dropped for a short period of time thereby causing ions to be ejected from the ion trap 2 in a substantially pulsed manner into the ion mobility spectrometer 4 .
  • a pulsed ion source such as a Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption Ionisation (“MALDI”) ion source or a Laser Desorption Ionisation ion source may be used instead of a continuous ion source. If a pulsed ion source is used, then ion trap 2 and ion gate 3 may be omitted.
  • MALDI Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption Ionisation
  • ion trap 2 and ion gate 3 may be omitted.
  • the ion mobility spectrometer 4 is a device which causes ions to become temporally separated based upon their ion mobility. A number of different forms of ion mobility spectrometer may be used.
  • the ion mobility spectrometer 4 may comprise a conventional ion mobility spectrometer consisting of a drift tube having a number of guard rings distributed within the drift tube.
  • the guard rings may be interconnected by equivalent valued resistors and connected to a DC voltage source. A linear DC voltage gradient is generated along the length of the drift tube.
  • the guard rings are not connected to an AC or RF voltage source.
  • the ion mobility spectrometer 4 may comprise a Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer (“FAIMS”).
  • FIMS Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer
  • a new form of ion mobility spectrometer 4 is preferably provided.
  • the ion mobility spectrometer 4 comprises a number of ring/annular or plate electrodes, or more generally electrodes having an aperture therein through which ions are transmitted.
  • the apertures are preferably all the same size and are preferably circular. In other embodiments at least 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90% or 95% of the electrodes have apertures which are substantially the same size or area.
  • the ion mobility spectrometer 4 may comprise a plurality of electrodes 4 a , 4 b which are either arranged in a single vacuum chamber, or, as shown in FIG. 7 ( a ), are arranged in two adjacent vacuum chambers separated by a differential pumping aperture Ap 1 .
  • the portion of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 a in an upstream vacuum chamber may have a length of approximately 100 mm
  • the portion of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 b in a downstream vacuum chamber may have a length of approximately 85 mm.
  • the ion trap 2 , ion gate 3 and upstream portion 4 a of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 are all preferably provided in the same vacuum chamber which is preferably maintained, in use, at a pressure within the range 0.1-10 mbar.
  • the vacuum chamber housing the upstream portion 4 a may be maintained at a pressure greater than 10 mbar up to a pressure at or near atmospheric pressure.
  • the vacuum chamber may alternatively be maintained at a pressure below 0.1 mbar.
  • the electrodes comprising the ion trap 2 are maintained at a DC voltage V rfl .
  • Ion gate 3 is normally held at a higher DC voltage V trap than V rfl , but the voltage applied to the ion gate 3 is periodically dropped to a voltage V extract which is preferably lower than V rfl thereby causing ions to be accelerated out of the ion trap 2 and to be admitted into the ion mobility spectrometer 4 .
  • Adjacent electrodes which form part of the ion trap 2 are preferably connected to opposite phases of a first AC or RF voltage supply.
  • the first AC or RF voltage supply preferably has a frequency within the range 0.1-3.0 MHz, preferably 0.5-1.1 MHz, further preferably 780 kHz.
  • Alternate electrodes forming the upstream section 4 a of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 are preferably capacitively coupled to opposite phases of the first AC or RF voltage supply.
  • the electrodes comprising the ion trap 2 , the electrodes comprising the upstream portion 4 a of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 and the differential pumping aperture Ap 1 separating the upstream portion 4 a from the downstream portion 4 b of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 are preferably interconnected via resistors to a DC voltage supply which in one embodiment comprises a 400 V supply.
  • the resistors interconnecting electrodes forming the upstream portion 4 a of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 may be substantially equal in value in which case an axial DC voltage gradient is obtained as shown in FIG. 7 ( b ).
  • the DC voltage gradient is shown for ease of illustration as being linear, but may preferably be stepped.
  • the applied AC or RF voltage is superimposed upon the DC voltage and serves to radially confine ions within the ion mobility spectrometer 4 .
  • the DC voltage V trap or V extract applied to the ion gate 3 preferably floats on the DC voltage supply.
  • the first AC or RF voltage supply is preferably isolated from the DC voltage supply by a capacitor.
  • alternate electrodes forming the downstream portion 4 b of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 are preferably capacitively coupled to opposite phases of a second AC or RF voltage supply.
  • the second AC or RF voltage supply preferably has a frequency in the range 0.1-3.0 MHz, preferably 1.8-2.4 MHz, further preferably 2.1 MHz.
  • a substantially linear or stepped axial DC voltage gradient is maintained along the length of the downstream portion 4 b of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 .
  • the applied AC or RF voltage is superimposed upon the DC voltage and serves to radially confine ions within the ion mobility spectrometer 4 .
  • the DC voltage gradient maintained across the upstream portion 4 a is preferably not the same as the DC voltage gradient maintained across the downstream portion 4 b . According to a preferred embodiment, the DC voltage gradient maintained across the upstream portion 4 a is greater than the DC voltage gradient maintained across the downstream portion 4 b.
  • the pressure in the vacuum chamber housing the downstream portion 4 b is preferably in the range 10 ⁇ 3 to 10 ⁇ 2 mbar. According to less preferred embodiments, the pressure may be above 10 ⁇ 2 mbar, and could be similar in pressure to the pressure of the vacuum chamber housing the upstream portion 4 a . It is believed that the greatest temporal separation of ions occurs in the upstream portion 4 a due to the higher background gas pressure. If the pressure is too low then the ions will not make enough collisions with gas molecules for a noticeable temporal separation of the ions to occur.
  • the size of the orifice in the ion gate 3 is preferably of a similar size or is substantially the same internal diameter or size as the differential pumping aperture Ap 1 . Downstream of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 another differential pumping aperture Ap 2 may be provided leading to a vacuum chamber housing a quadrupole mass filter 5 . Pre- and post-filters 14 a , 14 b may be provided.
  • the apertures of the electrodes forming the ion mobility spectrometer 4 are preferably all the same size. In other embodiments at least 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90% or 95% of the electrodes have apertures which are substantially the same size.
  • the ion mobility spectrometer 4 may comprise an ion tunnel comprised of a plurality of segments.
  • 15 segments may be provided.
  • Each segment may comprise two electrodes having apertures interleaved with another two electrodes having apertures. All four electrodes in a segment are preferably maintained at the same DC voltage but adjacent electrodes are connected to opposite phases of the AC or RF supply. The DC and AC/RF voltage supplies are isolated from one another.
  • at least 90% of all the electrodes forming the ion tunnel comprised of multiple segments have apertures which are substantially similar or the same in size.
  • Typical drift times through the ion mobility spectrometer 4 are of the order of a few ms. After all the generated ions have traversed the ion mobility spectrometer 4 a new pulse of ions may be admitted which marks the start of a new cycle of operation. Many cycles may be performed in a single experimental run.
  • An important feature of the preferred embodiment is the provision of a mass filter which is varied in a specified manner in conjunction with the operation of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 .
  • a quadrupole rod set mass filter 5 is used.
  • the mass filter 5 can be set to transmit (in conjunction with the operation of the ion mobility spectrometer 5 ) only those ions having a mass to charge ratio that corresponds at any particular point in time with the charge state of the ions of interest.
  • the mass filter should be able to sweep the chosen mass to charge ratio range on at least the time scale of ions drifting through the drift region. In other words, the mass filter should be able to be scanned across the desired mass to charge ratio range in a few milliseconds. Quadrupole mass filters 5 are capable of operating at this speed.
  • either the AC (or RF) voltage and/or the DC voltage applied to the quadrupole mass filter 5 may be swept in synchronisation with the pulsing of ions into the ion mobility spectrometer 4 .
  • the quadrupole mass filter 5 may be operated in either a high pass or band pass mode depending on whether e.g. multiply charged ions are preferred in general, or whether ions having a specific charge state are preferred.
  • the varying of a mass filtering characteristic of the quadrupole mass filter 5 is such that ions having a favoured charge state (or states) are preferably onwardly transmitted, preferably to the at least near exclusion of other charge states, for at least part of the cycle time Tm between pulses of ions being injected into the ion mobility spectrometer 4 .
  • FIGS. 7 ( c ) and ( d ) show the inter-relationship between ions being pulsed out of the ion trap 2 into the ion mobility spectrometer 4 , and the scanning of the mass filter 5 . Synchronisation of the operation of the mass filter 5 with the drift times of desired ions species through the ion mobility spectrometer 4 enables a duty cycle of ⁇ 100% to be obtained for ions having the charge state(s) of interest.
  • a collision (or gas) cell 6 may be provided preferably downstream of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 and preferably downstream of the quadrupole mass filter 5 .
  • Ions may be arranged so that they are sufficiently energetic when they enter the collision cell 6 so that they collide with gas molecules present in the gas cell 6 and fragment into daughter ions. Subsequent mass analysis of the daughter ions yields valuable mass spectral information about the parent ion(s). Ions may also be arranged so that they enter the gas or collision cell 6 with much less energy, in which case they may not substantially fragment.
  • the energy of ions entering the collision cell 6 can be controlled e.g. by setting the level of a voltage gradient experienced by the ions prior to entering the collision cell 6 . Since the voltage gradient can be switched near instantaneously, the collision cell 6 can, in effect, be considered to be switchable between a relatively high fragmentation mode and a relatively low fragmentation mode.
  • Ion optical lenses 7 are preferably provided downstream of the collision cell 6 to guide ions through a further differential pumping aperture Ap 3 and into an analyser chamber containing a mass analyser.
  • the mass analyser comprises an orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser 11 having a pusher and/or puller electrode 8 for injecting ions into an orthogonal drift region.
  • a reflectron 9 is preferably provided for reflecting ions travelling through the orthogonal drift region back towards a detector 10 .
  • at least some of the ions in a packet of ions entering an orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser will be orthogonally accelerated into the orthogonal drift region.
  • Ions will become temporally separated in the orthogonal drift region in a manner dependent upon their mass to charge ratio. Ions having a lower mass to charge ratio will travel faster in the drift region and will reach the detector 10 prior to ions having a higher mass to charge ratio. The time it takes an ion to drift through the drift region and to reach the detector 10 can be used to accurately determine the mass to charge ratio of the ion in question. The intensity of ions and their mass to charge ratios can be used to produce a mass spectrum.
  • FIG. 8 shows a second main preferred embodiment of the present invention.
  • the ion mobility spectrometer 4 , optional ion trap 2 and ion gate 3 may take any of the forms described in relation to the first main preferred embodiment of the present invention.
  • the ion sources described in relation to the first main preferred embodiment may also be used in relation to the second main preferred embodiment.
  • the second main preferred embodiment differs primarily from the first main preferred embodiment in that the quadrupole mass filter 5 is replaced with a different form of mass filter, namely an axial time of flight or drift region having a length L 1 and an injection electrode 8 .
  • Ions are preferably pulsed into the axial time of flight region and the injection electrode 8 is operated in conjunction with the pulsing of ions into the axial time of flight region so that only ions having a specific mass to charge ratio are injected by the injection electrode 8 and hence onwardly transmitted to e.g. the detector 10 .
  • the injection electrode 8 preferably comprises the pusher and/or puller electrode 8 of an orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser 11 .
  • a second ion trap 12 and optionally a second ion gate 13 are preferably provided. Ions received from the ion mobility spectrometer 4 are trapped in the second ion trap 12 . Packets of ions are then preferably periodically released from the second ion trap 12 , for example, by lowering the DC voltage applied to the second ion gate 13 in a similar manner to the way ions may be released from the first ion gate 3 . In other embodiments, however, the second ion trap 12 may trap and release ions without requiring a distinct second ion gate 13 .
  • the second ion trap 12 preferably comprises an ion tunnel ion trap comprising a plurality of electrodes having apertures therein.
  • the electrodes may take the form of rings or other annular shape or rectangular plates.
  • Adjacent electrodes are preferably connected to opposite phases of an AC or RF voltage supply so that ions are radially confined within the second ion trap 12 .
  • a particular advantage of an ion tunnel ion trap is that the DC voltage supplied to each electrode can be individually controlled.
  • a particularly preferred embodiment is to provide, in one mode of operation, a V-shaped DC potential profile comprising an upstream portion having a negative DC voltage gradient and a downstream portion having a positive DC voltage gradient so that (positive) ions become trapped towards the centre of the ion trap 12 . If the positive DC voltage gradient maintained across the downstream portion of the ion trap 12 is then changed to a zero gradient or more preferably to a negative gradient, then (positively charged) ions will be accelerated out the ion trap 12 as a pulse of ions. In this particular embodiment a distinct second ion gate 13 may then become redundant.
  • the second ion trap 12 may comprise a 3D-quadrupole ion trap comprising a central doughnut shaped electrode together with two endcap electrodes.
  • the second ion trap 12 may comprise a hexapole ion guide.
  • this embodiment is less preferred since no axial DC voltage gradient is present to urge ions out of the hexapole ion guide. It is for this reason that an ion tunnel ion trap is particularly preferred.
  • the drift region L 1 between the second ion gate 13 (or exit of the second ion trap 12 ) and the centre of the pusher/puller electrode 8 is such that the ions in a packet of ions released from the second ion trap 12 will become temporally dispersed by the time that they arrive at the pusher electrode 8 . Ions having a smaller mass to charge ratio will reach the pusher/puller electrode 8 before ions having a larger mass to charge ratio.
  • the pusher/puller electrode 8 can be set so as to inject ions into the orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser 11 at a predetermined time after they were first released from the second ion trap 12 .
  • the time of arrival of an ion at the pusher/puller electrode 8 is dependent upon its mass to charge ratio, it can be arranged that only ions having a certain mass to charge ratio will be injected by the pusher/puller electrode 8 into the orthogonal drift region of the orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser 11 by appropriate setting of the time delay.
  • FIG. 9 illustrates how the axial time of flight region in combination with the pusher electrode 8 may act as a mass filter.
  • L 1 is the distance from the exit of the second ion trap 12 or second ion gate 13 to the centre of the pusher electrode 8 .
  • Wb is the width of the pusher electrode.
  • Td ions of mass to charge ratio M 2 have reached the pusher/puller electrode 8 and the pusher/puller electrode 8 is preferably energised so that ions of a mass to charge ratio M 2 are injected into the orthogonal drift region of the time of flight mass analyser 11 .
  • the pusher electrode 8 is energised after a predetermined time delay Td to inject only certain ions.
  • the predetermined time delay Td is then increased and the process repeated.
  • Embodiments are also contemplated wherein, for example, 4-5 packets of ions are admitted into the axial drift region and the pusher electrode duly energised 4-5 times before the predetermined time delay Td is increased.
  • the delay time Td may be increased approximately every 100 ⁇ s. If a cycle is taken to be about 5 ms (i.e. the maximum time for an ion to drift through the ion mobility spectrometer 4 ), then the predetermined delay time Td may be increased approximately 50 times per cycle.
  • the period W may be adjusted such that the size of the packet of ions released from the second ion trap 12 exactly fills the pusher electrode 8 for a particular mass to charge ratio.
  • the improvement in duty cycle for this method over a continuously pulsing orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser is shown in FIG. 10 .
  • the second ion trap 12 , second ion gate 13 , drift region L 1 and pusher electrode 8 operate to act as a mass filter with a high duty cycle over a limited mass to charge ratio range.
  • a collision (or gas) cell 6 is not shown in FIG. 8 .
  • a separate collision cell 6 as described in relation to the first main preferred embodiment may be provided upstream or downstream of the second ion trap 12 .
  • the second ion trap 12 may act both as an ion trap and as a collision cell in both main preferred embodiments.
  • the ion tunnel ion trap/collision cell may comprise a plurality of segments (e.g. 15 segments), each segment comprising four electrodes interleaved with another four electrodes. All eight electrodes in a segment are preferably maintained at the same DC voltage, but adjacent electrodes are preferably supplied with opposite phases of an AC or RF voltage supply.
  • a collision gas preferably nitrogen or argon may be supplied to the collision cell at a pressure preferably of 10 ⁇ 3 -10 ⁇ 2 mbar. Ions may be trapped and/or fragmented in the ion trap/collision cell by appropriate setting of the DC voltages applied to the electrodes and the energy that ions are arranged to have upon entering the ion trap/collision cell.
  • FIGS. 11 ( a ) and ( b ) Some experimental results are shown in FIGS. 11 ( a ) and ( b ).
  • FIG. 11 ( a ) shows a conventional mass spectrum i.e. without any charge state selection being performed.
  • FIG. 11 ( b ) shows a comparable mass spectrum obtained with charge state selection according to the preferred embodiment. As can be seen, singly charged ions are substantially absent from the mass spectrum.
  • FIG. 12 ( a ) shows another conventional mass spectrum
  • FIG. 12 ( b ) shows a comparable mass spectrum obtained with charge state selection according to the preferred embodiment. Again, it can be seen that singly charged ions are substantially absent from the mass spectrum.
  • the mass filter e.g. quadrupole 5 or axial time of flight region and injection electrode 8
  • the mass filter may be arranged upstream of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 .
  • first and second main preferred embodiments have been described in relation to being able to filter out e.g. singly charged ions in preference to multiply charged ions, other embodiments are contemplated wherein singly charged ions are preferentially selected and onwardly transmitted whilst other charge state(s) are attenuated.
  • AC or RF voltage supplied to electrode(s) in an ion tunnel may be non-sinusoidal and may, for example, take the form of a square wave.
  • embodiments are contemplated wherein other types of mass filter are used instead (or in addition to) a quadrupole mass filter or an axial drift region in combination with an injection electrode as described in relation to the two main preferred embodiments.
  • embodiments are contemplated wherein a RF hexapole, octapole or other multipole rod set mass filter is used.
  • a RF ring set or a RF ion trap may be used.
  • both the upstream ion trap 2 and the ion mobility spectrometer 4 may comprise an ion tunnel i.e. a plurality of electrodes wherein each electrode has an aperture therein through which ions are transmitted.
  • the electrodes, preferably having substantially similar sized apertures, forming each ion tunnel may comprise essentially a square or rectangular plate or a ring. In either case the apertures are preferably circular.
  • the ion tunnel ion trap and/or ion mobility spectrometer may comprise at least 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90 or 100 electrodes of which at least 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90% or 95% have apertures which are substantially the same size or area.
  • the construction of an ion tunnel which preferably comprises a large number of plate like electrodes is quite distinct from a multipole rod set ion guide.
  • Embodiments of the invention are also contemplated wherein the DC voltage profile along the length of the ion mobility spectrometer and/or ion trap and/or collision cell is not strictly linear, but rather has a stepped profile.

Abstract

A mass spectrometer is disclosed comprising an ion mobility spectrometer in combination with a quadrupole mass filter which is scanned in synchronisation with the pulsing of ions into the ion mobility spectrometer thereby enabling ions having a particular charge state to be preferentially transmitted. Another embodiment replaces the quadrupole mass filter with an axial time of flight mass filter and an injection electrode.

Description

    BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • With the decoding of the 20-30,000 genes that compose the human genome, emphasis has switched to the identification of the translated gene products that comprise the proteome. Mass spectrometry has firmly established itself as the primary technique for identifying proteins due to its unparalleled speed, sensitivity and specificity. Strategies can involve either analysis of the intact protein, or more commonly digestion of the protein using a specific protease that cleaves at predictable residues along the peptide backbone. This provides smaller stretches of peptide sequence that are more amenable to analysis via mass spectrometry.
  • The mass spectrometry technique providing the highest degree of specificity and sensitivity is Electrospray ionisation (“ESI”) interfaced to a tandem mass spectrometer. These experiments involve separation of the complex digest mixture by microcapillary liquid chromatography with on-line mass spectral detection using automated acquisition modes whereby conventional MS and MS/MS spectra are collected in a data dependant manner. This information can be used directly to search databases for matching sequences leading to identification of the parent protein. This approach can be used to identify proteins that are present at low endogenous concentrations. However, often the limiting factor for identification of the protein is not the quality of the MS/MS spectrum produced but is the initial discovery of the multiply charged peptide precursor ion in the MS mode. This is due to the level of background chemical noise, largely singly charged in nature, which may be produced in the ion source of the mass spectrometer. FIG. 1 shows a typical conventional mass spectrum and illustrates how doubly charged species may be obscured amongst a singly charged background. A method whereby the chemical noise is reduced so that the mass spectrometer can more easily target peptide related ions would be highly advantageous for the study of protein digests.
  • A known method used to favour the detection of multiply charged species over singly charged species is to use an Electrospray ionisation orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser (“ESI-oaTOF”). The orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser counts the arrival of ions using a Time to Digital Converter (“TDC”) which has a discriminator threshold. The voltage pulse of a single ion must be high enough to trigger the discriminator and so register the arrival of an ion. The detector producing the voltage may be an electron multiplier or a Microchannel Plate detector (“MCP”). These detectors are charge sensitive so the size of signal they produce increases with increasing charge state. Discrimination in favour of higher charge states can be accomplished by increasing the discriminator voltage level, lowering the detector gain, or a combination of both. FIG. 2(a) shows a mass spectrum obtained with normal detector gain and FIG. 2(b) shows a comparable mass spectrum obtained with a reduced detector gain. An important disadvantage of lowering the detector gain (or of increasing the discriminator level) is that the sensitivity is lowered. As can be seen from the ordinate axes of FIG. 2(a) and (b), the sensitivity is reduced by a factor of ˜×4 when a lower detector gain is employed. Using this method it is also impossible to pick out an individual charge state. Instead, the best that can be achieved is a reduction of the efficiency of detection of lower charge states with respect to higher charge states.
  • Another ionisation technique that has been recently coupled to tandem mass spectrometers for biological mass spectrometry is Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption Ionisation (“MALDI”). When a MALDI ion source is used high levels of singly charged matrix related ions and chemical noise are generated which make it difficult to identify candidate peptide ions.
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • It is therefore desired to provide an improved mass spectrometer and method of mass spectrometry which does not suffer from some or all of the disadvantages of the prior art.
  • According to a first aspect of present invention there is provided a method of mass spectrometry comprising: providing a pulse of ions and performing the following steps before providing another pulse of ions: (a) temporally separating at least some of the ions according to their ion mobility in a first device; (b) mass filtering at least some of the ions according to their mass to charge ratio in a second device; and (c) progressively varying a mass filtering characteristic of the second device so that ions having a first charge state are onwardly transmitted in preference to ions having a second different charge state.
  • The preferred embodiment is particularly advantageous in that it allow ions with a chosen charge state to be selected from a mixture of ions having differing charge states. Another advantage is that sensitivity for this technique is greater than the known discriminator level technique as the detector can be run at full gain and all ions present may be counted.
  • According to the preferred embodiment, multiply charged ions (which may include doubly, triply and quadruply charged ions and ions having five or more charges) may be preferentially selected and transmitted whilst the intensity of singly charged ions may be reduced. In other embodiments any desired charged state or states may be selected. For example, two or more multiply charged states may be transmitted.
  • The first device preferably comprises an ion mobility spectrometer or other ion mobility device. Ions in an ion mobility spectrometer may be subjected to an electric field in the presence of a buffer gas so that different species of ion acquire different velocities and are temporally separated according to their ion mobility. The mobility of an ion in an ion mobility spectrometer typically depends inter alia upon its mass and its charge. Heavy ions with one charge tend to have lower mobilities than light ions with one charge. Also an ion of a particular mass to charge ratio with one charge tends to have a lower mobility than an ion with the same mass to charge ratio but carrying two (or more) charges.
  • The ion mobility spectrometer may be similar to a known ion mobility spectrometer comprising a drift tube together with one or more electrodes for maintaining an axial DC voltage gradient along at least a portion of the drift tube. Alternatively, the ion mobility spectrometer may comprise a Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer (“FAIMS”). In one embodiment a FAIMS may comprise two axially aligned inner cylinders surrounded by a long outer cylinder. The outer cylinder and a shorter inner cylinder are preferably held at the same electrical potential. A longer inner cylinder may have a high frequency high voltage asymmetric waveform applied to it, thereby establishing an electric field between the inner and outer cylinders. A compensation DC voltage is also applied to the longer inner cylinder. A FAIMS acts like a mobility filter and may operate at atmospheric pressure.
  • However, according to a particularly preferred embodiment, a new form of ion mobility spectrometer is contemplated comprising a plurality of electrodes having apertures wherein a DC voltage gradient is maintained across at least a portion of the ion mobility spectrometer and at least some of the electrodes are connected to an AC or RF voltage supply. The new form of ion mobility spectrometer is particularly advantageous in that the addition of an AC or RF voltage to the electrodes (which may be ring like or otherwise annular) results in radial confinement of the ions passing through the ion mobility spectrometer. Radial confinement of the ions results in higher ion transmission compared with conventional ion mobility spectrometers of the drift tube type.
  • The second device may preferably take one of two main forms. The first main preferred embodiment uses a quadrupole rod set mass filter and the second main preferred embodiment uses an axial time of flight drift region and a synchronised pusher electrode.
  • With regards the first main preferred embodiment, the quadrupole mass filter may be operated as a high pass mass to charge ratio filter so as to transmit substantially only ions having a mass to charge ratio greater than a minimum value. In this embodiment multiply charged ions can be preferentially transmitted compared to singly charged ions (i.e. doubly, triply, quadruply and ions having five or more charges may be transmitted whilst singly charged ions are attenuated).
  • According to another embodiment, the quadrupole mass filter may be operated as a band pass mass to charge ratio filter so as to substantially transmit only ions having a mass to charge ratio greater than a minimum value and smaller than a maximum value. This embodiment is particularly advantageous in that multiply charged ions of a single charge state e.g. triply charged, may be preferentially transmitted whilst ions having any other charge state are relatively attenuated. However, according to another embodiment ions having two or more neighbouring charge states (e.g. doubly and triply charged ions) may be transmitted and all other charge states may be attenuated. Embodiments are also contemplated wherein non-neighbouring charge states are selected (e.g. doubly and quadruply charged ions).
  • The quadrupole mass filter is preferably scanned so that the minimum mass to charge ratio cut-off is progressively increased during a cycle (which is defined as the period between consecutive pulses of ions being admitted into the ion mobility spectrometer). The quadrupole mass filter may be scanned in a substantially continuous (i.e. smooth) manner or alternatively the quadruple mass filter may be scanned in a substantially stepped manner.
  • According to the second main preferred embodiment, the second device may comprise a drift region, preferably free of any buffer gas and preferably an axial drift region, having an axis and an injection electrode for injecting at least some ions in a direction substantially orthogonal to the axis. The injection electrode may comprise a pusher and/or puller electrode of an orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser.
  • A particularly preferred feature is to provide an ion trap upstream of the drift region. This ion trap is separate to an ion trap which may be provided preferably upstream of the ion mobility spectrometer. The ion trap may preferably store and periodically release ions so that a pulsed (rather than a continuous) source of ions is admitted or otherwise inputted in to the drift region. The injection electrode is arranged to inject ions a predetermined period of time after ions have first been released from the ion trap upstream of the drift region. The period of time is set so that only ions having a desired mass to charge ratio or a mass to charge ratio within a desired range are substantially injected by the injection electrode in an orthogonal direction and are hence onwardly transmitted.
  • In a preferred embodiment a single packet of ions is released from the ion trap and then the predetermined time delay is slightly increased. The process of increasing the time delay may be repeated a number of times (e.g. 40-50 times) during one cycle of ions being input into the ion mobility spectrometer.
  • According to another embodiment, a number of packets of ions (e.g. 4-5 packets) may be repeatedly released from the ion trap before the predetermined time delay is progressively increased. As with the other embodiment, the process of increasing the time delay may be repeated a number of times during one cycle.
  • At the upstream end of the mass spectrometer, the ion source may be a pulsed ion source such as a Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption Ionisation (“MALDI”) ion source. The pulsed ion source may alternatively comprise a Laser Desorption Ionisation ion source which is not matrix assisted.
  • Alternatively, and more preferably, a continuous ion source may be used in which case an ion trap for storing ions and periodically releasing ions is also preferably provided. Continuous ion sources which may be used include Electrospray, Atmospheric Pressure Chemical Ionisation (“APCI”), Electron Impact (“EI”), Atmospheric Pressure Photon Ionisation (“APPI”) and Chemical Ionisation (“CI”) ion sources. Other continuous or pseudo-continuous ion sources may also be used. In an embodiment the mass spectrometer may be a Fourier Transform mass spectrometer or a Fourier Transform Ion Cyclotron Resonance mass spectrometer.
  • A collision cell may be provided in both the main preferred embodiments. In one mode of operation at least some ions entering the collision cell are caused to fragment.
  • An orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser is particularly preferred for both main preferred embodiments, although another type of mass analyser such as a quadrupole mass analyser or a 3D ion trap are also contemplated.
  • According to a second aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of mass spectrometry comprising: providing a pulse of ions; separating at least some of the ions according to their ion mobility in an ion mobility spectrometer; using a mass filter having a variable mass to charge ratio cut-off to mass filter at least some of the ions; and progressively increasing the mass to charge ratio cut-off in synchronisation with the ion mobility spectrometer.
  • According to a third aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of mass spectrometry comprising: separating at least some ions according to their ion mobility; mass filtering at least some ions; and arranging for multiply charged ions to be transmitted and for singly charged ions to be attenuated.
  • According to a fourth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of reducing unwanted singly charged ions from a mass spectrum, comprising: separating ions in an ion mobility spectrometer; passing the ions to a mass filter; and arranging the mass filter to have a mass to charge ratio cut-off which increases in time, the cut-off being predetermined based upon the known drift times of singly and doubly charged ions through the ion mobility spectrometer.
  • According to a fifth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of mass spectrometry, comprising: providing a pulse of ions; temporally separating at least some of the ions according to their ion mobility in an ion mobility spectrometer; providing a quadrupole rod set mass filter; and progressively increasing a mass to charge ratio cut-off of the mass filter so that multiply charged ions are onwardly transmitted in preference to singly charged ions.
  • According to a sixth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of mass spectrometry, comprising: providing a pulse of ions; temporally separating at least some of the ions according to their ion mobility in an ion mobility spectrometer; providing a drift region and an injection electrode; repeatedly pulsing ions into the drift region and causing the injection electrode to inject at least some of the ions in a substantially orthogonal direction after a delay time; and repeatedly increasing the delay time; wherein multiply charged ions are onwardly transmitted in preference to singly charged ions.
  • According to a seventh aspect of the present invention, there is provided a mass spectrometer comprising: a first device for temporally separating ions according to their ion mobility; a second device for mass filtering at least some of the ions according to their mass to charge ratio; and a controller which is arranged to progressively vary a mass filtering characteristic of the second device so that ions having a first charge state are onwardly transmitted in preference to ions having a second charge state.
  • According to an eighth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a mass spectrometer comprising: an ion mobility spectrometer; a quadrupole mass filter; and control means for progressively increasing the mass to charge ratio cut-off of the quadrupole mass filter in synchronisation with the ion mobility spectrometer.
  • According to a ninth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a mass spectrometer comprising: an ion source; an ion mobility spectrometer for separating ions according to both their mass and charge state; a mass filter; control means for controlling the ion mobility spectrometer and the mass filter; and a mass analyser; wherein the control means is arranged to control the ion mobility spectrometer and the mass filter to attenuate ions having a first charge state so that there is a higher proportion of ions having a second charge state to ions having the first charge state downstream of the ion mobility spectrometer and the mass filter compared with upstream of the ion mobility spectrometer and the mass filter.
  • According to a tenth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a mass spectrometer comprising: an ion source; a mass filter; an ion mobility spectrometer arranged downstream of the mass filter; and a mass analyser; wherein the mass filter and the ion mobility spectrometer are operated, in use, so that doubly and/or other multiply charged ions are transmitted to the mass analyser and singly charged ions are attenuated.
  • According to an eleventh aspect of the present invention, there is provided a mass spectrometer comprising: a continuous ion source; a first ion trap; an ion mobility spectrometer downstream of the first ion trap, the ion mobility spectrometer comprising a plurality of electrodes having apertures therein through which ions may be transmitted, wherein in use a DC voltage gradient is maintained across at least a portion of the ion mobility spectrometer and at least some of the electrodes are supplied with an AC or RF voltage, and wherein at least some of the electrodes are housed in a vacuum chamber maintained in use at a pressure within the range 0.1-10 mbar; a quadrupole mass filter downstream of the ion mobility spectrometer; and an orthogonal time of flight mass analyser comprising a pusher and/or puller electrode, orthogonal drift region and detector, the orthogonal time of flight mass analyser being arranged downstream of the quadrupole mass filter.
  • According to a twelfth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a mass spectrometer comprising: a continuous ion source; a first ion trap; an ion mobility spectrometer downstream of the first ion trap, the ion mobility spectrometer comprising a plurality of electrodes having apertures therein through which ions may be transmitted, wherein in use a DC voltage gradient is maintained across at least a portion of the ion mobility spectrometer and at least some of the electrodes are supplied with an AC or RF voltage, and wherein at least some of the electrodes are housed in a vacuum chamber maintained in use at a pressure within the range 0.1-10 mbar; a second ion trap downstream of the ion mobility spectrometer, the second ion trap comprising a plurality of electrodes having apertures through which ions may be transmitted, at least some of the electrodes being supplied in use with an AC or RF voltage; an axial drift region downstream of the second ion trap; and an orthogonal time of flight mass analyser comprising a pusher and/or puller electrode, orthogonal drift region and detector, the orthogonal time of flight mass analyser being arranged downstream of the axial drift region.
  • According to an thirteenth aspect of the present invention, there is provided an ion mobility spectrometer for separating ions according to their ion mobility, the ion mobility spectrometer comprising: a plurality of electrodes having apertures wherein a DC voltage gradient is maintained across at least a portion of the ion mobility spectrometer and at least some of the electrodes are connected to an AC or RF voltage supply.
  • The ion mobility spectrometer preferably extends between two vacuum chambers so that an upstream section comprising a first plurality of electrodes having apertures is arranged in a vacuum chamber and a downstream section comprising a second plurality of electrodes having apertures is arranged in a further vacuum chamber, the vacuum chambers being separated by a differential pumping aperture.
  • At least some of the electrodes in the upstream section are preferably supplied with an AC or RF voltage having a frequency within the range 0.1-3.0 MHz. A frequency of 0.5-1.1 MHz is preferred and a frequency of 780 kHz is particularly preferred. The upstream section is preferably arranged to be maintained at a pressure within the range 0.1-10 mbar, preferably approximately 1 mbar.
  • At least some of the electrodes in the downstream section are preferably supplied with an AC or RF voltage having a frequency within the range 0.1-3.0 MHz. A frequency of 1.8-2.4 MHz is preferred and a frequency of 2.1 MHz is particularly preferred. The downstream section is preferably arranged to be maintained at a pressure within the range 10−3-10−2 mbar.
  • The voltages applied to the electrodes in the upstream section may be such that a first DC voltage gradient is maintained in use across at least a portion of the upstream section and a second different DC voltage gradient may be maintained in use across at least a portion of the downstream section, the first DC voltage gradient being preferably greater than the second DC voltage gradient. Either voltage gradient does not necessarily have to be linear and indeed a stepped voltage gradient is particularly preferred.
  • Preferably, the ion mobility spectrometer comprises at least 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90 or 100 electrodes. Preferably, at least 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, 95% of the electrodes forming the ion mobility spectrometer have apertures which are of substantially the same size or area.
  • Other embodiments are contemplated wherein the second device comprises either a 2D ion trap (e.g. a rod set with front and/or rear trapping electrodes) or a 3D ion trap (e.g. a central ring electrode with front and rear endcap electrodes).
  • According to a fourteenth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of mass spectrometry, comprising:
  • scanning a Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer (“FAIMS”); and
  • trapping ions in a 2D or 3D ion trap.
  • Preferably, the FAIMS is scanned by varying a DC compensation voltage applied to the Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer.
  • The Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer is preferably selected from the group consisting of: (i) two parallel plates; and (ii) at least one inner cylinder and an outer cylinder.
  • According to a fifteenth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a mass spectrometer comprising:
  • a Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer (“FAIMS”); and
  • a 2D or 3D ion trap;
  • wherein the Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer is scanned in use.
  • According to a sixteenth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of mass spectrometry, comprising:
  • filtering ions using a Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer (“FAIMS”) so that a first group of ions having a first mobility are transmitted;
  • mass filtering or trapping at least some of the first group of ions so that ions having a desired charge state(s) are onwardly transmitted;
  • varying the Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer so that a second group of ions having a second mobility different to the first mobility are transmitted; and
  • mass filtering or trapping at least some of the second group of ions so that ions having a desired charge state(s) are onwardly transmitted.
  • Preferably, at least some of the ions having the desired charge(s) which are onwardly transmitted are subsequently mass analysed.
  • According to a seventeenth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a mass spectrometer, comprising:
  • a Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer (“FAIMS”) arranged to filter ions so that a first group of ions having a first mobility are transmitted;
  • a mass filter or ion trap operated so that at least some of the first group of ions having a desired charge state(s) are onwardly transmitted;
  • a controller for varying the Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer so that a second group of ions having a second mobility different to the first mobility are transmitted wherein the mass filter or ion trap is operated so that at least some of the second group of ions having a desired charge state(s) are onwardly transmitted.
  • According to an eighteenth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a mass spectrometer comprising:
  • a Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer (“FAIMS”) coupled to a mass filter so as to preferentially select ions having a desired charge state(s). Preferably, the Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer is not scanned. The mass filter may be a quadrupole, 2D or 3D ion trap or other mass filter.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • Various embodiments of the present invention will now be described, by way of example only, and with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
  • FIG. 1 shows a conventional mass spectrum;
  • FIG. 2(a) shows a conventional mass spectrum obtained with normal detector gain;
  • FIG. 2(b) shows a comparable conventional mass spectrum obtained by lowering the detector gain;
  • FIG. 3(a) shows the known relationship between flight time in a time of flight mass analyser drift region versus drift time in an ion mobility spectrometer for various singly and doubly charged ions;
  • FIG. 3(b) shows an experimentally determined relationship between the mass to charge ratio of a sample of ions and their drift time through an ion mobility spectrometer;
  • FIG. 4 illustrates the general principle of filtering out singly charged ions according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention;
  • FIG. 5 illustrates the general principle of selecting ions having a specific charge state according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention;
  • FIG. 6 shows a first main preferred embodiment of the present invention;
  • FIG. 7(a) illustrates a preferred embodiment of an ion trap, ion gate and ion mobility spectrometer;
  • FIG. 7(b) illustrates the various DC voltages which may be applied to the ion trap, ion gate and ion mobility spectrometer;
  • FIG. 7(c) illustrates how the DC voltage applied to the ion gate may vary as a function of time;
  • FIG. 7(d) illustrates how a quadrupole mass filter may be scanned according to a preferred embodiment;
  • FIG. 8 shows a second main preferred embodiment of the present invention;
  • FIG. 9 shows how ions of differing mass to charge ratios become temporally separated in an axial drift region;
  • FIG. 10 illustrates how the duty cycle of an ion trap-time of flight mass analyser increases to ˜100% for a relatively narrow mass to charge ratio range compared with a typical maximum duty cycle of ˜25% obtained by operating the time of flight mass analyser in a conventional manner;
  • FIG. 11(a) shows a conventional mass spectrum;
  • FIG. 11(b) shows a comparable mass spectrum obtained according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention;
  • FIG. 12(a) shows another conventional mass spectrum; and
  • FIG. 12(b) shows a comparable mass spectrum obtained according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
  • Various embodiments of the present invention will now be described. FIG. 3(a) shows the known relationship of flight time in a drift region of a time of flight mass analyser versus drift time in an ion mobility spectrometer for various singly and doubly charged ions. An experimentally determined relationship between the mass to charge ratio of ions and their drift time through an ion mobility spectrometer is shown in FIG. 3(b). This relationship can be represented by an empirically derived polynomial expression. As can be seen from these figures, a doubly charged ion having the same mass to charge ratio as a singly charged ion will take less time to drift through an ion mobility spectrometer compared with a singly charged ion. Although the ordinate axis of FIG. 3(a) is given as the flight time through the drift region of a time of flight mass analyser, it will be appreciated that this correlates directly with the mass to charge ratio of the ion.
  • The present inventors have recognised that if a mass filter is provided in combination with an ion mobility spectrometer, and if the mass filter is scanned (i.e. the transmitted range of mass to charge ratios is varied) in synchronisation with the drift of ions through the ion mobility spectrometer, then it is possible to arrange that only ions having a particular charge state (e.g. multiply charged ions) will be transmitted onwardly e.g. to a mass analyser. The ability to be able to substantially filter out singly charged background ions and/or to select ions of one or more specific charge states for analysis represents a significant advance in the art.
  • FIG. 4 illustrates an embodiment of the present invention. The known data of FIG. 3(a) and the experimentally derived data of FIG. 3(b) can be interpreted such that all ions having the same charge state can be considered to fall within a distinct region or band of a 2D plot of mass to charge ratio versus drift time through an ion mobility spectrometer. In FIG. 4 singly and doubly charged ions are shown as falling within distinct bands with an intermediate region therebetween where very few ions of interest are to be found. Triply and quadruply charged ions etc. are not shown for ease of illustration only. The large area below the “scan line” can be considered to represent singly charged ions and the other area can be considered to represent doubly charged ions.
  • According to a preferred embodiment, a mass filter is provided which is synchronised with the operation of an ion mobility spectrometer. Considering FIG. 4, it can be seen that at a time around 4 ms after ions have first entered or been admitted to the drift region of the ion mobility spectrometer, ions may be emerging from the ion mobility spectrometer with various different mass to charge ratios. Those ions which emerge with a mass to charge ratio of approximately 1-790 are most likely to be singly charged ions whereas those ions emerging with a mass to charge ratio of approximately 1070-1800 are most likely to be doubly charged ions. Very few, if any, ions will emerge at that point of time with a mass to charge ratio between 790-1070 (which corresponds with the intermediate region of the graph). Therefore, if the mass filter is set at this particular point in time so as to transmit only ions having a mass to charge ratio>790 then it can be assumed that the majority of the singly charged ions will not be onwardly transmitted whereas doubly charged ions (and ions having a higher charge state) will be substantially onwardly transmitted. If the mass filter is operated as a high pass mass filter and if the minimum cut-off mass to charge ratio of the mass filter follows in real time the “scan line” shown in FIG. 4 (i.e. if it tracks the upper predetermined mass to charge ratio for singly charged ions as a function of time) then it will be appreciated that only multiply charged ions will substantially be onwardly transmitted.
  • According to other embodiments the mass filter may track the lower predetermined mass to charge ratio for doubly charged ions. The cut-off mass to charge ratio may also lie for at least a portion of a cycle within the intermediate region which separates the regions comprising singly and doubly charged ions. The minimum cut-off mass to charge ratio of the mass filter may also vary in a predetermined or random manner between the upper threshold of the singly charged ion region, the intermediate region and the lower threshold of the doubly charged ion region. It will also be appreciated that according to less preferred embodiments, the minimum cut-off mass to charge ratio may fall for at least a portion of time within the region considered to comprise either singly or doubly charged ions. In such circumstances, ions of a potentially unwanted charge state may still be transmitted, but the intensity of such ions will nonetheless be reduced.
  • According to a preferred embodiment the minimum cut-off mass to charge ratio is varied smoothly, and is preferably increased with time. Alternatively, the minimum cut-off mass to charge ratio may be increased in a stepped manner.
  • FIG. 5 illustrates how the basic embodiment described in relation to FIG. 4 may be extended so that ions of a specific charge state(s) may be selected. In the embodiment illustrated in FIG. 5 the mass filter is operated as a band pass mass to charge ratio filter so as to select ions of a specific charge state (in this case triply charged ions) in preference to ions having any other charge state. At a time T after ions have first been admitted or introduced into the ion mobility spectrometer, the mass filter, being operated in a band pass mode, is set so as to transmit ions having a mass to charge ratio>P and <Q, wherein P preferably lies on the upper threshold of the region containing doubly charged ions and Q preferably lies on the lower threshold of the region containing quadruply charged ions. The upper and lower mass cut-offs P,Q are preferably smoothly increased with time so that at a later time T′, the lower mass to charge ratio cut-off of the band pass mass to charge ratio filter has been increased from P to P′ and the upper mass to charge ratio cut-off of the band pass mass to charge ratio filter has been increased from Q to Q′. As with the embodiment described in relation to FIG. 4, the upper and lower mass to charge ratio cut-offs do not need to follow the lower and upper thresholds of any particular charge state region, and according to the other embodiments the upper and lower cut-offs may fall within one or more intermediate regions and/or one or more of the bands in which ions having a particular charge state are to be found. For example, in one embodiment, the lower and upper mass to charge ratio cut-offs may simply follow the thresholds of the region comprising doubly, triply, quadruply etc. charged ions. According to other embodiments two, three, four or more charge states may be selected in preference to any other charge state (e.g. doubly and triply charged ions may be transmitted). Embodiments are also contemplated wherein non-neighbouring charge states (e.g. doubly and quadruply charged ions) are transmitted but not any other charge states.
  • FIG. 6 shows a first main preferred embodiment of the present invention. An ion mobility spectrometer 4 is provided. A pulse of ions is admitted to the ion mobility spectrometer 4. A continuous ion source, e.g. Electrospray ion source, preferably generates a beam of ions 1 which are trapped in an ion trap 2 upstream of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 and are then pulsed out of the ion trap 2 by the application of an extraction voltage to an ion gate 3 at the exit of the ion trap 2.
  • The ion trap 2 may comprise a quadrupole rod set having a length of approximately 75 mm. However, according to a more preferred embodiment the ion trap may comprise an ion tunnel comprising a plurality of electrodes having apertures therein. The apertures are preferably all the same size. In other embodiments at least 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90% or 95% of the electrodes have apertures which are substantially the same size. The ion tunnel may preferably comprise approximately 50 electrodes. Adjacent electrodes are preferably connected to opposite phases of an AC or RF voltage supply so that ions are radially confined in use within the ion tunnel.
  • The voltage applied to the ion gate 3 may be dropped for a short period of time thereby causing ions to be ejected from the ion trap 2 in a substantially pulsed manner into the ion mobility spectrometer 4.
  • In less preferred embodiments, a pulsed ion source such as a Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption Ionisation (“MALDI”) ion source or a Laser Desorption Ionisation ion source may be used instead of a continuous ion source. If a pulsed ion source is used, then ion trap 2 and ion gate 3 may be omitted.
  • The ion mobility spectrometer 4 is a device which causes ions to become temporally separated based upon their ion mobility. A number of different forms of ion mobility spectrometer may be used.
  • In one embodiment, the ion mobility spectrometer 4 may comprise a conventional ion mobility spectrometer consisting of a drift tube having a number of guard rings distributed within the drift tube. The guard rings may be interconnected by equivalent valued resistors and connected to a DC voltage source. A linear DC voltage gradient is generated along the length of the drift tube. The guard rings are not connected to an AC or RF voltage source.
  • In another embodiment, the ion mobility spectrometer 4 may comprise a Field Asymmetric Ion Mobility Spectrometer (“FAIMS”).
  • According to a particularly preferred embodiment, a new form of ion mobility spectrometer 4 is preferably provided. According to this embodiment the ion mobility spectrometer 4 comprises a number of ring/annular or plate electrodes, or more generally electrodes having an aperture therein through which ions are transmitted. The apertures are preferably all the same size and are preferably circular. In other embodiments at least 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90% or 95% of the electrodes have apertures which are substantially the same size or area. A schematic example of the new form of ion mobility spectrometer 4 is shown in FIG. 7(a). The ion mobility spectrometer 4 may comprise a plurality of electrodes 4 a,4 b which are either arranged in a single vacuum chamber, or, as shown in FIG. 7(a), are arranged in two adjacent vacuum chambers separated by a differential pumping aperture Ap1. In one embodiment, the portion of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 a in an upstream vacuum chamber may have a length of approximately 100 mm, and the portion of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 b in a downstream vacuum chamber may have a length of approximately 85 mm. The ion trap 2, ion gate 3 and upstream portion 4 a of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 are all preferably provided in the same vacuum chamber which is preferably maintained, in use, at a pressure within the range 0.1-10 mbar. According to less preferred embodiments, the vacuum chamber housing the upstream portion 4 a may be maintained at a pressure greater than 10 mbar up to a pressure at or near atmospheric pressure. Also, according to less preferred embodiments, the vacuum chamber may alternatively be maintained at a pressure below 0.1 mbar.
  • In the preferred embodiment the electrodes comprising the ion trap 2 are maintained at a DC voltage Vrfl. Ion gate 3 is normally held at a higher DC voltage Vtrap than Vrfl, but the voltage applied to the ion gate 3 is periodically dropped to a voltage Vextract which is preferably lower than Vrfl thereby causing ions to be accelerated out of the ion trap 2 and to be admitted into the ion mobility spectrometer 4.
  • Adjacent electrodes which form part of the ion trap 2 are preferably connected to opposite phases of a first AC or RF voltage supply. The first AC or RF voltage supply preferably has a frequency within the range 0.1-3.0 MHz, preferably 0.5-1.1 MHz, further preferably 780 kHz.
  • Alternate electrodes forming the upstream section 4 a of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 are preferably capacitively coupled to opposite phases of the first AC or RF voltage supply.
  • The electrodes comprising the ion trap 2, the electrodes comprising the upstream portion 4 a of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 and the differential pumping aperture Ap1 separating the upstream portion 4 a from the downstream portion 4 b of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 are preferably interconnected via resistors to a DC voltage supply which in one embodiment comprises a 400 V supply. The resistors interconnecting electrodes forming the upstream portion 4 a of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 may be substantially equal in value in which case an axial DC voltage gradient is obtained as shown in FIG. 7(b). The DC voltage gradient is shown for ease of illustration as being linear, but may preferably be stepped. The applied AC or RF voltage is superimposed upon the DC voltage and serves to radially confine ions within the ion mobility spectrometer 4. The DC voltage Vtrap or Vextract applied to the ion gate 3 preferably floats on the DC voltage supply. The first AC or RF voltage supply is preferably isolated from the DC voltage supply by a capacitor.
  • In a similar manner, alternate electrodes forming the downstream portion 4 b of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 are preferably capacitively coupled to opposite phases of a second AC or RF voltage supply. The second AC or RF voltage supply preferably has a frequency in the range 0.1-3.0 MHz, preferably 1.8-2.4 MHz, further preferably 2.1 MHz. In a similar manner to the upstream portion 4 a, a substantially linear or stepped axial DC voltage gradient is maintained along the length of the downstream portion 4 b of the ion mobility spectrometer 4. As with the upstream portion 4 a, the applied AC or RF voltage is superimposed upon the DC voltage and serves to radially confine ions within the ion mobility spectrometer 4. The DC voltage gradient maintained across the upstream portion 4 a is preferably not the same as the DC voltage gradient maintained across the downstream portion 4 b. According to a preferred embodiment, the DC voltage gradient maintained across the upstream portion 4 a is greater than the DC voltage gradient maintained across the downstream portion 4 b.
  • The pressure in the vacuum chamber housing the downstream portion 4 b is preferably in the range 10−3 to 10−2 mbar. According to less preferred embodiments, the pressure may be above 10−2 mbar, and could be similar in pressure to the pressure of the vacuum chamber housing the upstream portion 4 a. It is believed that the greatest temporal separation of ions occurs in the upstream portion 4 a due to the higher background gas pressure. If the pressure is too low then the ions will not make enough collisions with gas molecules for a noticeable temporal separation of the ions to occur.
  • The size of the orifice in the ion gate 3 is preferably of a similar size or is substantially the same internal diameter or size as the differential pumping aperture Ap1. Downstream of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 another differential pumping aperture Ap2 may be provided leading to a vacuum chamber housing a quadrupole mass filter 5. Pre- and post-filters 14 a,14 b may be provided. The apertures of the electrodes forming the ion mobility spectrometer 4 are preferably all the same size. In other embodiments at least 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90% or 95% of the electrodes have apertures which are substantially the same size.
  • In another preferred embodiment of the present invention the ion mobility spectrometer 4 may comprise an ion tunnel comprised of a plurality of segments. In one embodiment 15 segments may be provided. Each segment may comprise two electrodes having apertures interleaved with another two electrodes having apertures. All four electrodes in a segment are preferably maintained at the same DC voltage but adjacent electrodes are connected to opposite phases of the AC or RF supply. The DC and AC/RF voltage supplies are isolated from one another. Preferably, at least 90% of all the electrodes forming the ion tunnel comprised of multiple segments have apertures which are substantially similar or the same in size.
  • Typical drift times through the ion mobility spectrometer 4 are of the order of a few ms. After all the generated ions have traversed the ion mobility spectrometer 4 a new pulse of ions may be admitted which marks the start of a new cycle of operation. Many cycles may be performed in a single experimental run.
  • An important feature of the preferred embodiment is the provision of a mass filter which is varied in a specified manner in conjunction with the operation of the ion mobility spectrometer 4. In the first main preferred embodiment a quadrupole rod set mass filter 5 is used.
  • If the mass filter 5 is synchronised to the start of the pulse of ions being admitted into the ion mobility spectrometer 4, then the mass filter 5 can be set to transmit (in conjunction with the operation of the ion mobility spectrometer 5) only those ions having a mass to charge ratio that corresponds at any particular point in time with the charge state of the ions of interest. Preferably, the mass filter should be able to sweep the chosen mass to charge ratio range on at least the time scale of ions drifting through the drift region. In other words, the mass filter should be able to be scanned across the desired mass to charge ratio range in a few milliseconds. Quadrupole mass filters 5 are capable of operating at this speed.
  • According to the first main preferred embodiment, either the AC (or RF) voltage and/or the DC voltage applied to the quadrupole mass filter 5 may be swept in synchronisation with the pulsing of ions into the ion mobility spectrometer 4. As discussed above in relation to FIGS. 4 and 5, the quadrupole mass filter 5 may be operated in either a high pass or band pass mode depending on whether e.g. multiply charged ions are preferred in general, or whether ions having a specific charge state are preferred. The varying of a mass filtering characteristic of the quadrupole mass filter 5 is such that ions having a favoured charge state (or states) are preferably onwardly transmitted, preferably to the at least near exclusion of other charge states, for at least part of the cycle time Tm between pulses of ions being injected into the ion mobility spectrometer 4. FIGS. 7(c) and (d) show the inter-relationship between ions being pulsed out of the ion trap 2 into the ion mobility spectrometer 4, and the scanning of the mass filter 5. Synchronisation of the operation of the mass filter 5 with the drift times of desired ions species through the ion mobility spectrometer 4 enables a duty cycle of ˜100% to be obtained for ions having the charge state(s) of interest.
  • Referring back to FIG. 6, a collision (or gas) cell 6 may be provided preferably downstream of the ion mobility spectrometer 4 and preferably downstream of the quadrupole mass filter 5. Ions may be arranged so that they are sufficiently energetic when they enter the collision cell 6 so that they collide with gas molecules present in the gas cell 6 and fragment into daughter ions. Subsequent mass analysis of the daughter ions yields valuable mass spectral information about the parent ion(s). Ions may also be arranged so that they enter the gas or collision cell 6 with much less energy, in which case they may not substantially fragment. The energy of ions entering the collision cell 6 can be controlled e.g. by setting the level of a voltage gradient experienced by the ions prior to entering the collision cell 6. Since the voltage gradient can be switched near instantaneously, the collision cell 6 can, in effect, be considered to be switchable between a relatively high fragmentation mode and a relatively low fragmentation mode.
  • Ion optical lenses 7 are preferably provided downstream of the collision cell 6 to guide ions through a further differential pumping aperture Ap3 and into an analyser chamber containing a mass analyser. According to a particularly preferred embodiment, the mass analyser comprises an orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser 11 having a pusher and/or puller electrode 8 for injecting ions into an orthogonal drift region. A reflectron 9 is preferably provided for reflecting ions travelling through the orthogonal drift region back towards a detector 10. As is well known in the art, at least some of the ions in a packet of ions entering an orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser will be orthogonally accelerated into the orthogonal drift region. Ions will become temporally separated in the orthogonal drift region in a manner dependent upon their mass to charge ratio. Ions having a lower mass to charge ratio will travel faster in the drift region and will reach the detector 10 prior to ions having a higher mass to charge ratio. The time it takes an ion to drift through the drift region and to reach the detector 10 can be used to accurately determine the mass to charge ratio of the ion in question. The intensity of ions and their mass to charge ratios can be used to produce a mass spectrum.
  • FIG. 8 shows a second main preferred embodiment of the present invention. The ion mobility spectrometer 4, optional ion trap 2 and ion gate 3 may take any of the forms described in relation to the first main preferred embodiment of the present invention. Similarly, the ion sources described in relation to the first main preferred embodiment may also be used in relation to the second main preferred embodiment.
  • The second main preferred embodiment differs primarily from the first main preferred embodiment in that the quadrupole mass filter 5 is replaced with a different form of mass filter, namely an axial time of flight or drift region having a length L1 and an injection electrode 8. Ions are preferably pulsed into the axial time of flight region and the injection electrode 8 is operated in conjunction with the pulsing of ions into the axial time of flight region so that only ions having a specific mass to charge ratio are injected by the injection electrode 8 and hence onwardly transmitted to e.g. the detector 10. The injection electrode 8 preferably comprises the pusher and/or puller electrode 8 of an orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser 11.
  • In order to pulse ions into the axial time of flight region, a second ion trap 12 and optionally a second ion gate 13 are preferably provided. Ions received from the ion mobility spectrometer 4 are trapped in the second ion trap 12. Packets of ions are then preferably periodically released from the second ion trap 12, for example, by lowering the DC voltage applied to the second ion gate 13 in a similar manner to the way ions may be released from the first ion gate 3. In other embodiments, however, the second ion trap 12 may trap and release ions without requiring a distinct second ion gate 13.
  • The second ion trap 12 preferably comprises an ion tunnel ion trap comprising a plurality of electrodes having apertures therein. The electrodes may take the form of rings or other annular shape or rectangular plates. As with the ion mobility spectrometer 4, preferably at least 60%, 65%, 70%, 80%, 85%, 90% or 95% of the electrodes forming the ion tunnel ion trap have apertures which are substantially the same size or area. Adjacent electrodes are preferably connected to opposite phases of an AC or RF voltage supply so that ions are radially confined within the second ion trap 12. A particular advantage of an ion tunnel ion trap is that the DC voltage supplied to each electrode can be individually controlled. This enables numerous different axial DC voltage profiles to be created along the length of the ion tunnel ion trap 12. A particularly preferred embodiment is to provide, in one mode of operation, a V-shaped DC potential profile comprising an upstream portion having a negative DC voltage gradient and a downstream portion having a positive DC voltage gradient so that (positive) ions become trapped towards the centre of the ion trap 12. If the positive DC voltage gradient maintained across the downstream portion of the ion trap 12 is then changed to a zero gradient or more preferably to a negative gradient, then (positively charged) ions will be accelerated out the ion trap 12 as a pulse of ions. In this particular embodiment a distinct second ion gate 13 may then become redundant.
  • According to other embodiments, the second ion trap 12 may comprise a 3D-quadrupole ion trap comprising a central doughnut shaped electrode together with two endcap electrodes. According to another embodiment, the second ion trap 12 may comprise a hexapole ion guide. However, this embodiment is less preferred since no axial DC voltage gradient is present to urge ions out of the hexapole ion guide. It is for this reason that an ion tunnel ion trap is particularly preferred.
  • The drift region L1 between the second ion gate 13 (or exit of the second ion trap 12) and the centre of the pusher/puller electrode 8 is such that the ions in a packet of ions released from the second ion trap 12 will become temporally dispersed by the time that they arrive at the pusher electrode 8. Ions having a smaller mass to charge ratio will reach the pusher/puller electrode 8 before ions having a larger mass to charge ratio. The pusher/puller electrode 8 can be set so as to inject ions into the orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser 11 at a predetermined time after they were first released from the second ion trap 12. Since the time of arrival of an ion at the pusher/puller electrode 8 is dependent upon its mass to charge ratio, it can be arranged that only ions having a certain mass to charge ratio will be injected by the pusher/puller electrode 8 into the orthogonal drift region of the orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser 11 by appropriate setting of the time delay.
  • FIG. 9 illustrates how the axial time of flight region in combination with the pusher electrode 8 may act as a mass filter. L1 is the distance from the exit of the second ion trap 12 or second ion gate 13 to the centre of the pusher electrode 8. Wb is the width of the pusher electrode. At a time T=0, ions are released for a period W from the exit of the second ion trap 12. After a period of time Td ions of mass to charge ratio M2 have reached the pusher/puller electrode 8 and the pusher/puller electrode 8 is preferably energised so that ions of a mass to charge ratio M2 are injected into the orthogonal drift region of the time of flight mass analyser 11. This results in a duty cycle of ˜100% for ions of mass to charge ratio M2. Ions having a mass to charge ratio M1 which is greater than M2 have not reached the pusher/puller electrode 8 by the time that the pusher/puller electrode 8 is energised, and hence these ions are not injected into the orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser 11. Similarly, ions having a mass to charge ratio M3 which is smaller than M2 have already passed the pusher electrode 8 by the time that the pusher/puller electrode 8 is energised, and hence these ions are also not injected into the orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser 11.
  • Preferably, after a pulse of ions has been admitted into the axial drift region the pusher electrode 8 is energised after a predetermined time delay Td to inject only certain ions. The predetermined time delay Td is then increased and the process repeated. Embodiments are also contemplated wherein, for example, 4-5 packets of ions are admitted into the axial drift region and the pusher electrode duly energised 4-5 times before the predetermined time delay Td is increased. For sake of illustration only, if a single pulse of ions is released from the second ion trap 12 and the pulse takes a maximum of ˜100 μs to drift through the axial drift region, then the delay time Td may be increased approximately every 100 μs. If a cycle is taken to be about 5 ms (i.e. the maximum time for an ion to drift through the ion mobility spectrometer 4), then the predetermined delay time Td may be increased approximately 50 times per cycle.
  • By adjusting the length of the extraction pulse W and the predetermined time delay Td it is possible to optimise the transmission for any particular mass to charge ratio (or limited mass to charge ratio range) as desired. The period W may be adjusted such that the size of the packet of ions released from the second ion trap 12 exactly fills the pusher electrode 8 for a particular mass to charge ratio. The improvement in duty cycle for this method over a continuously pulsing orthogonal acceleration time of flight mass analyser is shown in FIG. 10.
  • As will be appreciated, the second ion trap 12, second ion gate 13, drift region L1 and pusher electrode 8 operate to act as a mass filter with a high duty cycle over a limited mass to charge ratio range.
  • For ease of illustration only, a collision (or gas) cell 6 is not shown in FIG. 8. However, a separate collision cell 6 as described in relation to the first main preferred embodiment may be provided upstream or downstream of the second ion trap 12. According to a particularly preferred embodiment, the second ion trap 12 may act both as an ion trap and as a collision cell in both main preferred embodiments. The ion tunnel ion trap/collision cell may comprise a plurality of segments (e.g. 15 segments), each segment comprising four electrodes interleaved with another four electrodes. All eight electrodes in a segment are preferably maintained at the same DC voltage, but adjacent electrodes are preferably supplied with opposite phases of an AC or RF voltage supply. A collision gas preferably nitrogen or argon may be supplied to the collision cell at a pressure preferably of 10−3-10−2 mbar. Ions may be trapped and/or fragmented in the ion trap/collision cell by appropriate setting of the DC voltages applied to the electrodes and the energy that ions are arranged to have upon entering the ion trap/collision cell.
  • Some experimental results are shown in FIGS. 11(a) and (b). FIG. 11(a) shows a conventional mass spectrum i.e. without any charge state selection being performed. FIG. 11(b) shows a comparable mass spectrum obtained with charge state selection according to the preferred embodiment. As can be seen, singly charged ions are substantially absent from the mass spectrum. Similarly, FIG. 12(a) shows another conventional mass spectrum and FIG. 12(b) shows a comparable mass spectrum obtained with charge state selection according to the preferred embodiment. Again, it can be seen that singly charged ions are substantially absent from the mass spectrum.
  • In both the first main preferred embodiment and the second main preferred embodiment, the mass filter (e.g. quadrupole 5 or axial time of flight region and injection electrode 8) are shown and described as being downstream of the ion mobility spectrometer 4. However, according to other embodiments the mass filter (e.g. quadrupole 5 or axial time of flight region and injection electrode 8) may be arranged upstream of the ion mobility spectrometer 4.
  • Furthermore, although the first and second main preferred embodiments have been described in relation to being able to filter out e.g. singly charged ions in preference to multiply charged ions, other embodiments are contemplated wherein singly charged ions are preferentially selected and onwardly transmitted whilst other charge state(s) are attenuated.
  • Other embodiments are contemplated wherein the AC or RF voltage supplied to electrode(s) in an ion tunnel (either an ion mobility spectrometer and/or ion trap) may be non-sinusoidal and may, for example, take the form of a square wave.
  • Yet further embodiments are contemplated wherein other types of mass filter are used instead (or in addition to) a quadrupole mass filter or an axial drift region in combination with an injection electrode as described in relation to the two main preferred embodiments. In particular, embodiments are contemplated wherein a RF hexapole, octapole or other multipole rod set mass filter is used. Alternatively, a RF ring set or a RF ion trap (either 2D or 3D) may be used.
  • According to a preferred embodiment both the upstream ion trap 2 and the ion mobility spectrometer 4 may comprise an ion tunnel i.e. a plurality of electrodes wherein each electrode has an aperture therein through which ions are transmitted. The electrodes, preferably having substantially similar sized apertures, forming each ion tunnel may comprise essentially a square or rectangular plate or a ring. In either case the apertures are preferably circular. According to various embodiments, the ion tunnel ion trap and/or ion mobility spectrometer may comprise at least 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90 or 100 electrodes of which at least 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90% or 95% have apertures which are substantially the same size or area. As will be appreciated, the construction of an ion tunnel which preferably comprises a large number of plate like electrodes is quite distinct from a multipole rod set ion guide.
  • Embodiments of the invention are also contemplated wherein the DC voltage profile along the length of the ion mobility spectrometer and/or ion trap and/or collision cell is not strictly linear, but rather has a stepped profile.
  • Although the present invention has been described with reference to preferred embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and detail may be made without departing from the scope of the invention as set forth in the accompanying claims.

Claims (14)

1-56. (canceled)
57. A mass spectrometer comprising:
a continuous ion source;
a first ion trap;
an ion mobility spectrometer downstream of said first ion trap, said ion mobility spectrometer comprising a plurality of electrodes having apertures therein through which ions may be transmitted, wherein in use a DC voltage gradient is maintained across at least a portion of said ion mobility spectrometer and at least some of said electrodes are supplied with an AC or RF voltage, and wherein at least some of said electrodes are housed in a vacuum chamber maintained in use at a pressure within the range 0.1-10 mbar;
a quadrupole mass filter downstream of said ion mobility spectrometer; and
an orthogonal time of flight mass analyser comprising a pusher and/or puller electrode, orthogonal drift region and detector, said orthogonal time of flight mass analyser being arranged downstream of said quadrupole mass filter.
58. A mass spectrometer comprising:
a continuous ion source;
a first ion trap;
an ion mobility spectrometer downstream of said first ion trap, said ion mobility spectrometer comprising a plurality of electrodes having apertures therein through which ions may be transmitted, wherein in use a DC voltage gradient is maintained across at least a portion of said ion mobility spectrometer and at least some of said electrodes are supplied with an AC or RF voltage, and wherein at least some of said electrodes are housed in a vacuum chamber maintained in use at a pressure within the range 0.1-10 mbar;
a second ion trap downstream of said ion mobility spectrometer, said second ion trap comprising a plurality of electrodes having apertures through which ions may be transmitted, at least some of said electrodes being supplied in use with an AC or RF voltage;
an axial drift region downstream of said second ion trap; and
an orthogonal time of flight mass analyser comprising a pusher and/or puller electrode, orthogonal drift region and detector, said orthogonal time of flight mass analyser being arranged downstream of said axial drift region.
59. An ion mobility spectrometer for separating ions according to their ion mobility, said ion mobility spectrometer comprising:
a plurality of electrodes having apertures wherein a DC voltage gradient is maintained across at least a portion of said ion mobility spectrometer and at least some of said electrodes are connected to an AC or RF voltage supply.
60. An ion mobility spectrometer as claimed in claim 59, wherein said ion mobility spectrometer comprises:
an upstream section comprising a first plurality of electrodes having apertures arranged in a vacuum chamber; and
a downstream section comprising a second plurality of electrodes having apertures arranged in a further vacuum chamber, said vacuum chambers being separated by a differential pumping aperture.
61. An ion mobility spectrometer as claimed in claim 60, wherein at least some of said electrodes in said upstream section are supplied with an AC or RF voltage having a frequency within the range 0.1-3.0 MHz.
62. An ion mobility spectrometer as claimed in claim 60, wherein said upstream section is arranged to be maintained at a pressure within the range 0.1-10 mbar.
63. An ion mobility spectrometer as claimed in claim 60, wherein at least some of said electrodes in said downstream section are supplied with an AC or RF voltage having a frequency within the range 0.1-3.0 MHz.
64. An ion mobility spectrometer as claimed in claim 60, wherein said downstream section is arranged to be maintained at a pressure within the range 10−3-10−2 mbar.
65. An ion mobility spectrometer as claimed in claim 60, wherein a first DC voltage gradient is maintained in use across at least a portion of said upstream section and a second DC voltage gradient is maintained in use across at least a portion of said downstream section, said first DC voltage gradient being greater than said second DC voltage gradient.
66. An ion mobility spectrometer as claimed in claim 59, wherein the ion mobility spectrometer comprises at least 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90 or 100 electrodes.
67. An ion mobility spectrometer as claimed in claim 59, wherein at least 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, 95% of said electrodes have apertures which are of substantially the same size or area.
68-83. (canceled)
84. An ion mobility spectrometer as claimed in claim 59, further comprising, in combination:
a mass filter; and
a controller arranged to continuously vary a mass filtering characteristic of the mass filter so that multiply charged ions having a first charge state are onwardly transmitted in preference to singly charged ions.
US11/513,185 2001-06-21 2006-08-31 Mass spectrometer and method of mass spectrometry Abandoned US20070023635A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US11/513,185 US20070023635A1 (en) 2001-06-21 2006-08-31 Mass spectrometer and method of mass spectrometry

Applications Claiming Priority (6)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GBGB-0115203.2 2001-06-21
GB0115203A GB0115203D0 (en) 2001-06-21 2001-06-21 Mass spectrometer and methods of mass spectrometry
US29977101P 2001-06-22 2001-06-22
US36111202P 2002-03-01 2002-03-01
US10/176,072 US7586088B2 (en) 2001-06-21 2002-06-21 Mass spectrometer and method of mass spectrometry
US11/513,185 US20070023635A1 (en) 2001-06-21 2006-08-31 Mass spectrometer and method of mass spectrometry

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/176,072 Continuation US7586088B2 (en) 2001-06-21 2002-06-21 Mass spectrometer and method of mass spectrometry

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20070023635A1 true US20070023635A1 (en) 2007-02-01

Family

ID=27447958

Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/176,072 Active 2026-07-10 US7586088B2 (en) 2001-06-21 2002-06-21 Mass spectrometer and method of mass spectrometry
US11/513,185 Abandoned US20070023635A1 (en) 2001-06-21 2006-08-31 Mass spectrometer and method of mass spectrometry

Family Applications Before (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/176,072 Active 2026-07-10 US7586088B2 (en) 2001-06-21 2002-06-21 Mass spectrometer and method of mass spectrometry

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (2) US7586088B2 (en)

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20070192116A1 (en) * 2006-02-10 2007-08-16 Garmin Ltd., A Cayman Islands Corporation Position-sensitive events
US7550717B1 (en) * 2006-11-30 2009-06-23 Thermo Finnigan Llc Quadrupole FAIMS apparatus
US20100084547A1 (en) * 2007-01-25 2010-04-08 Micromass Uk Limited Mass Spectrometer
US20100314548A1 (en) * 2008-01-19 2010-12-16 Airsense Analytics Gmbh Method and device for detection and identification of gases
US20110284734A1 (en) * 2008-01-24 2011-11-24 Micromass Uk Limited Ion Mobility Spectrometer
US20140042312A1 (en) * 2011-03-15 2014-02-13 Micromass Uk Limited M/Z Targeted Attenuation on Time of Flight Instruments
CN106550609A (en) * 2014-05-30 2017-03-29 英国质谱公司 Combined type tandem mass spectrometry method and ionic mobility mass spectrography

Families Citing this family (57)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7586088B2 (en) * 2001-06-21 2009-09-08 Micromass Uk Limited Mass spectrometer and method of mass spectrometry
US7635841B2 (en) * 2001-12-12 2009-12-22 Micromass Uk Limited Method of mass spectrometry
US6797943B2 (en) * 2002-05-07 2004-09-28 Siemens Ag Method and apparatus for ion mobility spectrometry
JP2003329646A (en) * 2002-05-16 2003-11-19 Hitachi Ltd Method and device for ion separation and ion trapping, and method and device for ion detection using them
US6906319B2 (en) * 2002-05-17 2005-06-14 Micromass Uk Limited Mass spectrometer
US6791078B2 (en) * 2002-06-27 2004-09-14 Micromass Uk Limited Mass spectrometer
GB0313054D0 (en) * 2003-06-06 2003-07-09 Micromass Ltd Mass spectrometer
WO2008007069A2 (en) 2006-07-10 2008-01-17 Micromass Uk Limited Mass spectrometer
GB0514964D0 (en) 2005-07-21 2005-08-24 Ms Horizons Ltd Mass spectrometer devices & methods of performing mass spectrometry
US7078680B1 (en) * 2004-02-06 2006-07-18 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Ion mobility spectrometer using ion beam modulation and wavelet decomposition
US6933498B1 (en) * 2004-03-16 2005-08-23 Ut-Battelle, Llc Ion trap array-based systems and methods for chemical analysis
US20050269508A1 (en) * 2004-06-03 2005-12-08 Lippa Timothy P Apparatus and methods for detecting compounds using mass spectra
US7208726B2 (en) * 2004-08-27 2007-04-24 Agilent Technologies, Inc. Ion trap mass spectrometer with scanning delay ion extraction
GB0420408D0 (en) * 2004-09-14 2004-10-20 Micromass Ltd Mass spectrometer
GB0424426D0 (en) 2004-11-04 2004-12-08 Micromass Ltd Mass spectrometer
JP4911781B2 (en) * 2004-12-07 2012-04-04 マイクロマス ユーケー リミテッド Mass spectrometer
DE102004061821B4 (en) * 2004-12-22 2010-04-08 Bruker Daltonik Gmbh Measurement method for ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometer
US20070090287A1 (en) * 2005-10-20 2007-04-26 Foote James D Intelligent SIM acquisition
US10276358B2 (en) * 2006-01-02 2019-04-30 Excellims Corporation Chemically modified ion mobility separation apparatus and method
GB0608470D0 (en) * 2006-04-28 2006-06-07 Micromass Ltd Mass spectrometer
GB0622780D0 (en) 2006-11-15 2006-12-27 Micromass Ltd Mass spectrometer
WO2008072326A1 (en) * 2006-12-14 2008-06-19 Shimadzu Corporation Ion trap tof mass spectrometer
WO2008101998A2 (en) * 2007-02-24 2008-08-28 Sociedad Europea De Análisis Diferencial De Movilidad, S.L. Method to accurately discriminate gas phase ions with several filtering devices in tandem
US10566169B1 (en) * 2008-06-30 2020-02-18 Nexgen Semi Holding, Inc. Method and device for spatial charged particle bunching
GB201002445D0 (en) * 2010-02-12 2010-03-31 Micromass Ltd Improved differentiation and determination of ionic conformations by combining ion mobility and hydrogen deuterium exchange reactions
GB201205009D0 (en) 2012-03-22 2012-05-09 Micromass Ltd Multi-dimensional survey scans for improved data dependent acquisitions (DDA)
GB201304039D0 (en) * 2013-03-06 2013-04-17 Micromass Ltd Time shift improved IMS digitisation
WO2014135870A1 (en) * 2013-03-06 2014-09-12 Micromass Uk Limited Optimised ion mobility separation timescales for targeted ions
US9552970B2 (en) 2013-03-06 2017-01-24 Micromass Uk Limited Time shift for improved ion mobility spectrometry or separation digitisation
WO2014140542A1 (en) 2013-03-13 2014-09-18 Micromass Uk Limited A dda experiment with reduced data processing
WO2015071650A1 (en) * 2013-11-12 2015-05-21 Micromass Uk Limited Method of correlating precursor and fragment ions
EP3069376A2 (en) 2013-11-12 2016-09-21 Micromass UK Limited Method of isolating ions
WO2015071649A2 (en) 2013-11-12 2015-05-21 Micromass Uk Limited Method of associating precursor and product ions
EP3069371B1 (en) 2013-11-12 2023-01-04 Micromass UK Limited Ion trap mass spectrometers
US10115576B2 (en) 2013-12-12 2018-10-30 Waters Technologies Corporation Method and an apparatus for analyzing a complex sample
WO2015181566A1 (en) * 2014-05-30 2015-12-03 Micromass Uk Limited Hybrid mass spectrometer
WO2015185941A1 (en) * 2014-06-06 2015-12-10 Micromass Uk Limited Mobility selective attenuation
DE202016008460U1 (en) * 2015-03-06 2018-01-22 Micromass Uk Limited Cell population analysis
EP3265819B1 (en) 2015-03-06 2020-10-14 Micromass UK Limited Chemically guided ambient ionisation mass spectrometry
EP3800657A1 (en) 2015-03-06 2021-04-07 Micromass UK Limited Desorption electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry ("desi-ms") and desorption electroflow focusing ionisation ("deffi-ms") analysis of biological samples on swabs
GB2552430B (en) 2015-03-06 2022-05-11 Micromass Ltd Collision surface for improved ionisation
EP3265822B1 (en) 2015-03-06 2021-04-28 Micromass UK Limited Tissue analysis by mass spectrometry or ion mobility spectrometry
CA2977906A1 (en) 2015-03-06 2016-09-15 Micromass Uk Limited In vivo endoscopic tissue identification tool
CN108700590B (en) 2015-03-06 2021-03-02 英国质谱公司 Cell population analysis
US10777397B2 (en) 2015-03-06 2020-09-15 Micromass Uk Limited Inlet instrumentation for ion analyser coupled to rapid evaporative ionisation mass spectrometry (“REIMS”) device
EP4174906A1 (en) 2015-03-06 2023-05-03 Micromass UK Limited Improved ionisation of gaseous samples
WO2016142681A1 (en) 2015-03-06 2016-09-15 Micromass Uk Limited Spectrometric analysis of microbes
EP3671216A1 (en) 2015-03-06 2020-06-24 Micromass UK Limited Imaging guided ambient ionisation mass spectrometry
CN107636794B (en) 2015-03-06 2020-02-28 英国质谱公司 Liquid trap or separator for electrosurgical applications
EP3264989B1 (en) 2015-03-06 2023-12-20 Micromass UK Limited Spectrometric analysis
EP3265823B1 (en) 2015-03-06 2020-05-06 Micromass UK Limited Ambient ionization mass spectrometry imaging platform for direct mapping from bulk tissue
GB201509402D0 (en) * 2015-06-01 2015-07-15 Micromass Ltd Lock mass library for internal correction
GB201517195D0 (en) 2015-09-29 2015-11-11 Micromass Ltd Capacitively coupled reims technique and optically transparent counter electrode
WO2017178833A1 (en) 2016-04-14 2017-10-19 Micromass Uk Limited Spectrometric analysis of plants
GB2559145B (en) 2017-01-26 2022-07-13 Micromass Ltd Method of separating different ions having similar mass to charge ratios
CN107331597B (en) * 2017-06-23 2019-01-01 江苏天瑞仪器股份有限公司福建分公司 The ion repulsion method of Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization Time of Flight instrument
US11293898B2 (en) * 2020-02-06 2022-04-05 Thermo Finnigan Llc Duty cycle improvement for a mass spectrometer using ion mobility separation

Citations (21)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2382919A (en) * 1942-04-08 1945-08-14 Sartori William Joseph Esters of aleuritic acid
US5140158A (en) * 1990-10-05 1992-08-18 The United States Of America As Represented By The United States Department Of Energy Method for discriminative particle selection
US5552600A (en) * 1995-06-07 1996-09-03 Barringer Research Limited Pressure stabilized ion mobility spectrometer
US5789745A (en) * 1997-10-28 1998-08-04 Sandia Corporation Ion mobility spectrometer using frequency-domain separation
US5818055A (en) * 1996-07-12 1998-10-06 Bruker-Franzen Analytik Gmbh Method and device for injection of ions into an ion trap
US5905258A (en) * 1997-06-02 1999-05-18 Advanced Research & Techology Institute Hybrid ion mobility and mass spectrometer
US6020586A (en) * 1995-08-10 2000-02-01 Analytica Of Branford, Inc. Ion storage time-of-flight mass spectrometer
US6040575A (en) * 1998-01-23 2000-03-21 Analytica Of Branford, Inc. Mass spectrometry from surfaces
US6107628A (en) * 1998-06-03 2000-08-22 Battelle Memorial Institute Method and apparatus for directing ions and other charged particles generated at near atmospheric pressures into a region under vacuum
US6124592A (en) * 1998-03-18 2000-09-26 Technispan Llc Ion mobility storage trap and method
US6188066B1 (en) * 1994-02-28 2001-02-13 Analytica Of Branford, Inc. Multipole ion guide for mass spectrometry
US20010032929A1 (en) * 2000-02-29 2001-10-25 Katrin Fuhrer Mobility spectrometer
US6323482B1 (en) * 1997-06-02 2001-11-27 Advanced Research And Technology Institute, Inc. Ion mobility and mass spectrometer
US20020014586A1 (en) * 1997-06-02 2002-02-07 Clemmer David E. Instrument for separating ions in time as functions of preselected ion mobility and ion mass
US20020070339A1 (en) * 1997-06-02 2002-06-13 Clemmer David E. Ion separation instrument
US20020070338A1 (en) * 2000-12-08 2002-06-13 Loboda Alexander V. Ion mobility spectrometer incorporating an ion guide in combination with an MS device
US20030001084A1 (en) * 2001-06-21 2003-01-02 Bateman Robert Harold Mass spectrometer and method of mass spectrometry
US6507019B2 (en) * 1999-05-21 2003-01-14 Mds Inc. MS/MS scan methods for a quadrupole/time of flight tandem mass spectrometer
US6630662B1 (en) * 2002-04-24 2003-10-07 Mds Inc. Setup for mobility separation of ions implementing an ion guide with an axial field and counterflow of gas
US6683301B2 (en) * 2001-01-29 2004-01-27 Analytica Of Branford, Inc. Charged particle trapping in near-surface potential wells
US6906319B2 (en) * 2002-05-17 2005-06-14 Micromass Uk Limited Mass spectrometer

Family Cites Families (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2217103B (en) 1988-04-06 1992-09-23 Graseby Ionics Ltd Ion mobility detector
WO1997007530A1 (en) 1995-08-11 1997-02-27 Mds Health Group Limited Spectrometer with axial field
ATE308751T1 (en) 1998-08-05 2005-11-15 Ca Nat Research Council DEVICE AND METHOD FOR THREE-DIMENSIONAL ION STORAGE UNDER ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE
US6512224B1 (en) 1999-07-21 2003-01-28 The Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, Inc. Longitudinal field driven field asymmetric ion mobility filter and detection system
US6822224B2 (en) * 2000-03-14 2004-11-23 National Research Council Canada Tandem high field asymmetric waveform ion mobility spectrometry (FAIMS)tandem mass spectrometry
AU2001239076A1 (en) 2000-03-14 2001-09-24 National Research Council Canada Tandem high field asymmetric waveform ion mobility spectrometry (faims)/ion mobility spectrometry

Patent Citations (25)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2382919A (en) * 1942-04-08 1945-08-14 Sartori William Joseph Esters of aleuritic acid
US5140158A (en) * 1990-10-05 1992-08-18 The United States Of America As Represented By The United States Department Of Energy Method for discriminative particle selection
US6188066B1 (en) * 1994-02-28 2001-02-13 Analytica Of Branford, Inc. Multipole ion guide for mass spectrometry
US5552600A (en) * 1995-06-07 1996-09-03 Barringer Research Limited Pressure stabilized ion mobility spectrometer
US6020586A (en) * 1995-08-10 2000-02-01 Analytica Of Branford, Inc. Ion storage time-of-flight mass spectrometer
US5818055A (en) * 1996-07-12 1998-10-06 Bruker-Franzen Analytik Gmbh Method and device for injection of ions into an ion trap
US6323482B1 (en) * 1997-06-02 2001-11-27 Advanced Research And Technology Institute, Inc. Ion mobility and mass spectrometer
US5905258A (en) * 1997-06-02 1999-05-18 Advanced Research & Techology Institute Hybrid ion mobility and mass spectrometer
US20020014586A1 (en) * 1997-06-02 2002-02-07 Clemmer David E. Instrument for separating ions in time as functions of preselected ion mobility and ion mass
US20020070339A1 (en) * 1997-06-02 2002-06-13 Clemmer David E. Ion separation instrument
US6559441B2 (en) * 1997-06-02 2003-05-06 Advanced Research & Technology Institute Ion separation instrument
US6498342B1 (en) * 1997-06-02 2002-12-24 Advanced Research & Technology Institute Ion separation instrument
US5789745A (en) * 1997-10-28 1998-08-04 Sandia Corporation Ion mobility spectrometer using frequency-domain separation
US6040575A (en) * 1998-01-23 2000-03-21 Analytica Of Branford, Inc. Mass spectrometry from surfaces
US6124592A (en) * 1998-03-18 2000-09-26 Technispan Llc Ion mobility storage trap and method
US6107628A (en) * 1998-06-03 2000-08-22 Battelle Memorial Institute Method and apparatus for directing ions and other charged particles generated at near atmospheric pressures into a region under vacuum
US6507019B2 (en) * 1999-05-21 2003-01-14 Mds Inc. MS/MS scan methods for a quadrupole/time of flight tandem mass spectrometer
US20010032929A1 (en) * 2000-02-29 2001-10-25 Katrin Fuhrer Mobility spectrometer
US20020070338A1 (en) * 2000-12-08 2002-06-13 Loboda Alexander V. Ion mobility spectrometer incorporating an ion guide in combination with an MS device
US6744043B2 (en) * 2000-12-08 2004-06-01 Mds Inc. Ion mobilty spectrometer incorporating an ion guide in combination with an MS device
US6683301B2 (en) * 2001-01-29 2004-01-27 Analytica Of Branford, Inc. Charged particle trapping in near-surface potential wells
US20030001084A1 (en) * 2001-06-21 2003-01-02 Bateman Robert Harold Mass spectrometer and method of mass spectrometry
US6630662B1 (en) * 2002-04-24 2003-10-07 Mds Inc. Setup for mobility separation of ions implementing an ion guide with an axial field and counterflow of gas
US6906319B2 (en) * 2002-05-17 2005-06-14 Micromass Uk Limited Mass spectrometer
US7095014B2 (en) * 2002-05-17 2006-08-22 Micromass Uk Limited Mass spectrometer

Cited By (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20070192116A1 (en) * 2006-02-10 2007-08-16 Garmin Ltd., A Cayman Islands Corporation Position-sensitive events
US7550717B1 (en) * 2006-11-30 2009-06-23 Thermo Finnigan Llc Quadrupole FAIMS apparatus
US20100084547A1 (en) * 2007-01-25 2010-04-08 Micromass Uk Limited Mass Spectrometer
US8076637B2 (en) * 2007-01-25 2011-12-13 Micromass Uk Limited Mass spectrometer
US20100314548A1 (en) * 2008-01-19 2010-12-16 Airsense Analytics Gmbh Method and device for detection and identification of gases
US9404889B2 (en) * 2008-01-19 2016-08-02 Airsense Analytics Gmbh Method and device for detection and identification of gases
US8415618B2 (en) * 2008-01-24 2013-04-09 Micromass Uk Limited Ion mobility spectrometer
US20110284734A1 (en) * 2008-01-24 2011-11-24 Micromass Uk Limited Ion Mobility Spectrometer
US20140042312A1 (en) * 2011-03-15 2014-02-13 Micromass Uk Limited M/Z Targeted Attenuation on Time of Flight Instruments
US9129781B2 (en) * 2011-03-15 2015-09-08 Micromass Uk Limited M/Z targeted attenuation on time of flight instruments
GB2489110B (en) * 2011-03-15 2015-11-25 Micromass Ltd M/Z targeted attenuation on time of flight instruments
US9721780B2 (en) 2011-03-15 2017-08-01 Micromass Uk Limited M/Z targeted attenuation on time of flight instruments
CN106550609A (en) * 2014-05-30 2017-03-29 英国质谱公司 Combined type tandem mass spectrometry method and ionic mobility mass spectrography

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US20030001084A1 (en) 2003-01-02
US7586088B2 (en) 2009-09-08

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US7586088B2 (en) Mass spectrometer and method of mass spectrometry
US6906319B2 (en) Mass spectrometer
EP1942340B1 (en) Ion mobility spectrometer
US6992283B2 (en) Mass spectrometer
US8735805B2 (en) Mass spectrometer
JP5329967B2 (en) Mass spectrometer
GB2389704A (en) An ion mobility spectrometer coupled to a scanning mass filter and fragmentation cell
EP2001039B1 (en) Mass spectrometer
US9576779B2 (en) System and method for quantitation in mass spectrometry
GB2409764A (en) Processing mass spectral data to filter out ions having undesired charge states
US11031232B1 (en) Injection of ions into an ion storage device
GB2392305A (en) An ion tunnel ion mobility spectrometer
CA2714930C (en) Mass spectrometer

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- AFTER EXAMINER'S ANSWER OR BOARD OF APPEALS DECISION