[0001] This invention relates to a tandem mass spectrometer system with open structure AC-only
rod sections and a method of operating such a system.
[0002] In a paper published at page 2274 of the 1978 issue of Journal of the American Chemical
Society, R.A. Yost and C. G. Enke have disclosed that a tandem mass spectrometer system
may be used to create ion species from a sample, select one individual ion species,
fragment that species, and obtain the mass spectrum of the fragments. The paper discloses
that a quadrupole mass filter, AC-only quadrupole section, and a second quadrupole
mass filter are arranged in series. Gas is introduced into the center quadrupole section
to produce collision induced dissociation. Each quadrupole is arranged in its own
cylindrical container with end apertures and operates separately. With a system such
as this, it is found that ion signal losses are very large as the ions travel from
one quadrupole to the next, and therefore the sensitivity of the apparatus is low.
The invention therefore aims to increase sensitivity in such systems.
[0003] The invention as claimed is intended to achieve this.
[0004] In one of its aspects the present invention provides a structure which provides greatly
increased sensitivity by permitting close coupling of the tandem sections. According
to the invention the rods of the adjacent sections are located closely adjacent each
other, and the gas introduced into the AC-only section is largely removed, before
it can enter a mass filter section, by forming the rods or a portion of the rods of
the AC-only section as open structures, so that the gas can be removed directly through
the rods as well as between them.
[0005] The open rod structure of the AC-only section may also be used in conventional mass
spectrometers, where ions from a gassy source outside a vacuum chamber are admitted
with gas into the vacuum chamber and are guided through the vacuum chamber to a mass
spectrometer in the chamber. Such an arrangement is shown in U.S. Patent No. 4,148,196.
Open structure AC-only rods may be used as will be described to guide the ions from
the aperture of the vacuum chamber to the mass spectrometer.
[0006] It is noted that Brubaker and others have disclosed that short AC-only rod sections
placed between an ion source and the AC-DC mass filter can improve ion transfer efficiency.
One aspect of the present invention however combines with this known feature the concept
of open structure AC-only rods so that ions from very gassy sources can be more efficiently
transferred into the AC-DC mass filter while the unwanted gas will rapidly disperse
through the open structure, thereby permitting such gassy ion sources to be more closely
and more efficiently coupled to the AC-DC ion mass filter.
[0007] Embodiments of the invention will now be described by way of example with reference
to the accompanying drawings in which:
Fig. 1 is a partly diagrammatic cross sectional view of a mass spectrometer system
according to the invention;
Fig. 2 is a cross sectional view of the apparatus of Fig. 1 taken along lines 2-2
of Fig. 1;
Fig. 3 is a perspective view, partly in section, showing the rods of one of the mass
spectrometers of Fig. 1 mounted, in a holder;
Fig. 4 is an end view showing open structure rods of the mass spectrometer system
of Fig. 1;
Fig. 5 is a side view showing the rods of Fig. 4;
Fig. 6 is a block diagram of an electrical control system for use with the mass spectrometer
system of Fig. 1;
Fig. 7 is a cross sectional view showing a modification of the arrangement of Fig.
1;
Fig. 8 is a cross sectional view taken along lines 8-8 of Fig. 7;
Fig. 9 is a partly diagrammatic view showing a vacuum pumping arrangement for the
apparatus of Fig. 7;
Fig. 10 is a view similar to Fig. 7 and showing a modification of the Fig. 7 arrangement;
Fig. 11 is a bottom view of a portion of the Fig. 10 apparatus;
Fig. 12 is a perspective view of a rod of the Figs. 7 to 10 apparatus;
Fig. 13 is a cross sectional view of a modified mass spectrometer system according
to the invention; and
Fig. 14 is a cross sectional view taken along lines 14-14 of Fig. 13.
[0008] Reference is first made to Fig. 1, which shows a vacuum chamber generally indicated
at 2 and which contains three mass spectrometer sections generally indicated at 4,
6, and 8 respectively. Spectrometer section 2 is a conventional quadrupole mass spectrometer
and contains four rods 10 arranged in a conventional quadrupole square pattern. Spectrometer
section 8 is also a conventional quadrupole mass spectrometer and similarly contains
four rods 12 arranged in a normal square pattern. Spectrometer section 6 also contains
four rods 14, arranged as shown in Fig. 3 in normal quadrupole fashion. However the
rods 14 have solid center portions, indicated at 14-1, and open structure end extensions,
indicated at 14-2.
[0009] The center portions 14-1 of rods 14, and also the rods 10, 12 of quadrupole sections
4, 8 are held in conventional holder plates 16 (Fig. 3). The plates 16 of quadrupole
sections 4, 8 are located in conventional cylindrical cans or housings 18 (Figs. 1,
3) which are normally used for mass spectrometers. The cans or housings 18 have apertures
2
0 therein to allow gas within the mass spectrometer sections
4, 8 to be pumped away. The center protions 14-1 of rods 14 are however housed in a
cylindrical can 32 which is closed except at its ends, which are defined by end discs
24 having apertures 26 therein. In addition a duct 28 carries a target gas from a
source 29 into the can 22 and into the space between the centre portions 14-1 of rods
14.
[0010] The open structure rod extensions 14-2 of the rods 14 are formed, as shown in Figs.
4, 5 of thin stiff rods or wires 30. Each set of wires 30 is arranged in a curved
configuration to simulate the shape of the outer portion of a normal quadrupole rod,
so that the field porduced by the four sets of wires 30 will correspond as closely
as possible to the normal hyperbolic field 31 (Fig. 4) produced by the solid rods
of a conventional quadrupole. The wires 30 are supported at their inner ends by welds
or solder connections to the solid rod portions 14-1. At their outer ends the wires
30 are supported by a holder 32 (see especially Fig. 5) which also acts as a barrier
to help limit the amount of gas from the centre quadrupole section 6 entering the
end quadrupole sections 4, 8, but which has a central aperture 32a.to permit ions
to pass therethrough. Typically five thin wires may be used, spaced around somewhat
less than half the inner circumference of the equivalent solid rod.
[0011] The three quadrupole sections 4, 6, 8 are mounted in axial alignment, end to end
along the axis of the cylindrical vacuum chamber 2, being held in positon by support
members not shown. Each rod of each of the three sets is aligned axially with each
corresponding rod of each other set, so that the spaces between the rods of each set
are linearly aligned, for ions to pass therethrough. The ends of the rods 10, 12 and
14 are insulated from each other by a small air gap or thin layer of insulating material,
indicated at 33.
[0012] The end wall of the vacuum chamber 2 contains an aperture 34 through which ions to
be examined are supplied from an ion source 36. Ion source 36 may typically be the
source shown in U.S. Patent 4,148,196, in which a trace gas is admitted to an ionization
chamber, ionized, and the resultant ions are drawn by appropriate electric potentials
through a curtain gas chamber into the vacuum chamber 2. Curtain gas in the curtain
gas chamber serves to block entry of unwanted materials into the vacuum chamber 2,
and the curtain gas, which may typically be argon or nitrogen, also enters the vacuum
chamber where it is cryopumped thus permitting maintenance of a high vacuum in chamber
2.
[0013] As shown in Figs. 1 and 2, appropriate cooling means are provided to cryopump the
curtain gas entering the vacuum chamber 2. Specifically, a refrigerating mechanism
38 is provided having an inner tubular finger or cold station 40 and an outer finger
or second cold station 42. The mechanism 38 is typically able to extract 2 to 4 watts
of thermal energy from the inner finger 40 at 12° to 20°K, and is also typically able
to extract 5 to 10 watts of thermal energy from the outer finger 42, at 70° to 90°K.
[0014] A copper support tube 44 is mounted on the top of the inner finger 40, in good thermal
contact therewith, and supports at each end a cylindrical shell 46, also made of a
good thermal conducting material such as copper. The shells 46 have end walls 48 and
contain slots (not shown) in their upper surfaces so that the center quadrupole section
6 may be fitted downwardly into the shells 46.
[0015] A pair of intermediate shells 52 are connected to the outer finger 42 and serve to
reduce the heat load on the inner shells 46. The intermediate shells 52 are mounted
on an outer copper support tube 54 concentric with the inner support tube 44, the
outer tube 54 being mounted on the second finger 42. The exterior surfaces of the
intermediate shells 52 are insulated with aluminized plastic film, as indicated at
56, to reduce heat radiation to the intermediate shells 52. The outer end walls of
the intermediate shells 52 contain inset centre sections 50 spaced by annular gaps
62 from the outer end wall sections 54 and supported thereon by support struts, not
shown. The gaps 62 assist in cryopumping gas from the end quadrupole sections 4, 8,
as will be explained. The intermediate shells 52 also contain slots, shown at 64,
Fig. 2, in thin upper surfaces to facilitate assembly of the operations.
[0016] In operation, ion species from a sample to be considered are supplied from ion source
36 and are focused (by conventional means not shown) to enter the first quadrupole
section 4. In the first quadrupole section ions of the desired mass are selected and
enter the central quadrupole section 6. In the central quadrupole section 6, the ions
encounter a target gas supplied via duct 28 into the space 68 between the rods 14
of the center quadrupole section. The resultant collisions induce dissociation of
the ions into fragments or daughter ions, which are then transmitted into the third
quadrupole section 8. The third quadrupole section 8 acts as a mass filter, selecting
the desired fragments or daughter ions for detection by an ion detector 70. In order
to act as mass filters, the end quadrupole sections 4, 8 are supplied with conventional
AC and DC voltages, but the center quadrupole section 6, which must pass a wide range
of masses, has only an AC voltage applied to its rods 14. The gas pressure in the
first and third quadrupole sections 4, 8 must be low, typically 10 torr or less for
proper quadrupole operation. For this purpose the vacuum chamber 2 is pumped either
by being fitted with appropriate cryo-cooling surfaces, as explained in patent 4,148,196,
or by vacuum pumps connected to ports 72 in the chamber 2. Target gas in the center
quadrupole section 6, which tends to enter the space between the rods of the end quadrupole
sections 4, 8, is largely pumped away by flowing through the open spaces between the
wires 30 and conaensing on the cooled surfaces of inner shells 46.
[0017] The advantages of the open structure of the rod extensions 14-2, formed by wires
30, are as follows. Normally in a quadrupole section the gap dl (Fig. 3) between the
rods is relatively small compared with the diameter d2 of the rods (typically dl may
be about one third of d2). Thus if the rods are solid, relatively little gas can escape
between them, and therefore a substantial gap must be left between the ends of adjacent
quadrupole sections, so that the gas can exit through this gap and so it will not
unduly pressurize the cans of the end quadrupole sections 4, 8. For reasons to be
explained, large gaps between the quadrupole sections result in substantial ion signal
losses.
[0018] With the open structure rod extensions 14-2 shown, the quadrupole sections 4, 6,
8 can be placed very closely adjacent each other, the ends of the rods of each section
being separated only by the small gap 33 as discussed. Since a quadrupole section
having an AC-only field applied thereto requires less accuracy of manufacture than
a quadrupole section having both AC and DC applied to its-rods, the open structure
described may be used with little or no degradation in performance. Provided that
the open sections 14-2 are of reasonably substantial length, only a small proportion
of the target gas entering the centre quadrupole section 6 will travel into the end
sections 4, 8.
[0019] In a typical system according to the invention, the parameters of the system may
be adjusted so that the gas density in the target region, i.e. in the space between
rods 14-1, is in the range between 10
-3 torr and 10 torr, and the lengths of rod extensions 14-2 are each equal to the lengths
of rods 14-1 (e.g. 4 inches). Then most of the gas in the target region 68 travels
outwardly through the gaps between the wires 30, as indicated by arrows 76, Fig. 5.
Only a small proportion of the gas, indicated by arrows 78, is beamed directly into
the space between the rods of the end quadrupole sections 4, 8. Typically the gas
flow entering the spaces between the rods of the end quadrupole sections 4, 8 may
be only about 1/200 of the flow through duct 28.
[0020] As indicated previously, close coupling the quadru- poles can greatly reduce ion
signal transmission losses as ions travel from one quadrupole to the next, as compared
with having a large gap between the quadrup le sections. s described in the co-pending
application (reference no. 19472) filed jointly b. us and Peter M. Dawson filed concurrently
herewith, it is found that ions entering or leaving a quadrupole section must pass
through a fringing field in which the ions are outside the region of stable operation
of the quadrupole section. If the quadrupole sections are spaced well apart, as has
previously been the case, the ions leaving one quadrupole section must pass through
a complete fringing field which ranges from the high value of the field existing at
the end of the quadrupole rods down to zero, and then as they enter the next quadrupole
section they must pass through a further complete fringing field. This causes high
ion transmission losses. By placing the quadrupole sections close together, the longitudinal
extent of the fringing field is greatly reduced and therefore ion losses are also
reduced. Preferably the longitudinal spacing between the quadrupole sections should
be r
o or less, where r
o is the radius of the inscribed circle within the rods 14-1 or 14-2.
[0021] In addition, as described in the said co-pending application it is found that best
transmission of the ions through the quadrupole is obtained when the AC fields of
the three quadrupole sections are all synchronized in frequency and in phase. Preferably
there is zero phase shift between the AC fields applied to the three sections, but
some small phase shift can be tolerated, typically 0.03 cycles, but in any event no
more than 0.1 cycles phase shift between the fields should normally be allowed. With
the quadrupole sections close coupled and the AC fields synchronized in frequency
and phase, it is found that greatly improved ion transmission is achieved as compared
with locating the quadrupole sections each in separate cans and spaced sufficiently
far apart to permit pumping of the target gas out from the spaces between the cans,
and with the AC fields not precisely synchronized in frequency and phase.
[0022] Reference is next made to Fig. 6, which shows in block diagram form an electrical
system for operating the mass spectrometer system described. As shown, an oscillator
80 is provided which produces an AC voltage of the frequency required for mass spectrometer
operation (typically 1 to 3 MHz). The AC voltage is applied through a buffer amplifier
82 (which prevents feedback) to a power amplifier 84 and to the AC terminals 86 of
the first quadrupole section 4. DC is supplied by rectifying a portion of the power
amplifier output in a rectifier 88 and applying the resultant DC to the terminals
86. Mass selection is controlled by a mass command unit 90, which by varying the output
of buffer amplifier 82 controls the level of the AC (and hence also the DC) voltage
applied to terminals 86. This changes the operating point of the first quadrupole
section 4, in order to select a desired mass for transmission through the rods 10.
[0023] The oscillator 80 is also connected through a phase shifter 92 to another buffer
amplifier 94. The output of amplifier 92 is connected to another power amplifier 96
which applies AC to the terminals 98 of rods 14 of the centre quadrupole section 6.
No DC is applied to the rods 14. This arrangement ensures that the AC voltage applied
to rods 14 is synchronized in frequency and phase with that applied to rods 10 so
that the resultant AC fields are synchronized in frequency and phase. Preferably the
phase shift will be zero or nearly zero.
[0024] The oscillator 80 is also connected through a second phase shifter 100 to another
buffer amplifier 102. The output of buffer amplifier 102 is connected to power amplifier
104 which is connected to the AC terminals 106 of the rods 12 of of the third quadrupole
section 8. DC is again supplied by a rectifier 108, and the level of the voltages
applied is controlled by a mass command unit 110 which adjusts the output of buffer
amplifier 102. The use of phase shifter 100 again ensures that the AC voltage applied
to the rods 12 is synchronized in frequency and phase with the AC voltage applied
to the rods 10, 14, again so that the AC fields will be synchronized in frequency
or phase. Preferably again the phase shift will be zero or nearly zero.
[0025] The DC voltage applied to the rods 10, 12 are nor- mally in phase, but as explained
in the said co-pending application, the DC voltages can be applied with advantage
in some applications so that the DC fields produced by rods 10, 12 are 90° out of
phase.
[0026] Reference is next made to Figs. 7 and 8, which show a modification of the structure
of Figs. 1 to 5. In Figs. 7 and 8 primed reference numerals indicate parts corresponding
to those of Figs. 1 to 5.
[0027] In the Figs. 7 and 8 embodiment the rods 14' of the centre quadrupole section 6'
are of open structure (formed by wires 30') along their entire length, i.e. the solid
centre portions have been eliminated. The inner shells 46 have therefore been combined
into a single shell 46' connected to the inner cold finger 40', and the intermediate
shells 52 have been combined into a single shell 52' connected to the outer cold finger
42'.
[0028] In order to achieve sufficient gas density within the target region 68' (since there
are no longer any solid rod portions to confine the gas), a high pressure free jet
of target gas is provided. Specifically, gas is supplied via plastic tubing 28' to
a precooling chamber 120 which is of heat conducting material (e.g. copper) and is
thermally in good contact with the intermediate shell 52'. Gas flowing through tube
28' is precooled in chamber 120 and then emerges from aperture 122 of chamber 110
in the form of a free jet 124. The free jet passes through the open structure rods
14' into the target region 68' between the rods. The density distribution in the target
region 68' then has generally a cosine squared distribution, being a maximum at point
126 and falling off toward the ends 128. For example, if the pressure in chamber 120
is 0.1 torr, and if aperture 122 is .004 inches in diameter, this typically creates
a gas density equivalent to 2.5 X 10 torr at point 126, falling to 1.38 X 10
-4 torr at points 128 (the figures are approximate).
[0029] The arrangement shown in Figs. 7 and 8 has several advantages over that shown in
Figs. 1 to 5. In the Figs. 1 to 5 arrangement gas travels axially through the space
between the solid centre portions 14-1 and thus some gas is beamed directly at the
end quadrupole sections 4, 8. In the Figs. 7 and 8 arrangement the gas is beamed across
the axis of the centre quadrupole section 6' and therefore is less likely to enter
the end quadrupole sections. In addition the centre quadrupole section 6' can now
be made shorter, e.g. 10 cm. in length. This saves high frequency electric power (which
is roughly proportional to the length of the rods) and also reduces the cost of the
apparatus, since the vacuum chamber is now shorter.
[0030] In the Figs. 7 and 8 arrangement the inner and intermediate shells 46', 52' are shown
split into two halves each joined at flanges 128, 129, for easy assembly and disassembly.
A disadvantage of the Figs. 7 and 8 arrangement is that each target gas molecule is
effectively only used once (since it travels across the axis of the centre quadrupole
section 6) rather than effectively being used more than once as in the Figs. 1 to
5 version, where the molecules bounce generally back and forth across the target region
as they migrate outward, parallel to the quadrupole axis. Therefore the Figs. 7 and
8 arrangement requires a higher gas flow through tube 28, to achieve the same integrated
target density, typically 5 to 20 times as much gas as in Figs. 1 to 5. However the
gas flows are normally very small, so the practical effect of the increased gas requirement
is minor. In addition, although more pumping capacity is needed to remove the additional
target gas flow, the precooling chamber 120 reduces the molecular velocity of the
gas molecules typically by half, giving an effective density gain of two, i.e. for
the same gas mass flow, twice the effective density is achieved in the target region
68'. In addition part of the load on the inner cooling finger 40' has been transferred
to the outer cooling finger 42', which has a much higher capacity.
[0031] The remainder of the vacuum chamber 2' in the Figs. 7 and 8 arrangement may be pumped
by cryo-cooling surfaces extended from the inner and outer cold fingers 40', 42',
or by separate cooling surfaces connected to a separate refrigerating device.
[0032] If the tandem spectrometer arrangement of Figs. 7 and 8 is pumped by conventional
diffusion pumps, rather than by cryopumping, then the arrangement will typically be
as shown in Fig. 9. As shown, inner shell 46' (and both cold fingers 40', 42') have
been omitted and intermediate shell 52' terminates, below the quadrupole rods, in
a diverging conical hood 130. Hood 130 extends to a duct 132 leading to a diffusion
pump or a turbo pump (not shown). Since the gas is being beamed directly into the
pump, the effective capacity of the pump is considerably increased (typically by a
factor of three) over its capacity if it were handling random gas flow. The remainder
of vacuum chamber 2' is pumped by a pump connected to duct 134, and the ion source
36' is pumped by a pump connected to duct 136.
[0033] A modification of the Figs. 7 and 8 arrangement is shown in Figs. 10 and 11. The
only change made is that the exit from precooling chamber 120 is now through a standard
collimated hole structure 138, which is simply a block of metal with numerous holes
139 formed therein which create about 80% transparency. The collimated hole structure
138 produces numerous beamlets 140 of gas which, if the pressure is not too high,
travel directly across the target area 68' without significant interference with each
other. For example the collimated hole structure 138 can typically be operated to
produce a uniform pressure of 10
-3 torr in the target region 68' along the whole length of structure 138, with a fairly
sharp drop-off of gas density at each end. If the pressure becomes too high, however,
the beamlets 140 of gas collide with each other and scatter, producing a more diffuse
pressure border.
[0034] It is normally desirable in all cases to create a high transparency of the open rod
structures 14-2 or 14'. Although rod extensions 14-2 are shown as being self supporting
stiff wires mounted at their ends, better transparency can be obtained by using fine
wires mounted in tension. Such an arrangement is shown in Figs. 7 to 10 and also in
Fig. 12, where one of the open rods 14' is shown in detail. As shown, rod 14' consists
of two end discs 140 each of an insulating material, joined together by two stiff
insulating bars 142, one at each side of the discs 140. Stretched between the discs
140 are five thin wires 30'; a larger or smaller number of wires can however be used,
depending on how accurately it is desired to create the field. If the rod diameter
is 0.625 inch, as is typical, and if it is desired to have the open structure rod
about 90% transparent, then the total wire diameter (ignoring the bars 142) will be
.0625 inches and the diameter of each of the five wires 30' is .0125 inches. The wires
30' are anchored in the discs 30' by conventional means, not shown.
[0035] Alternatively a metal cylinder may be used to form each rod 14', etched to produce
holes therein yielding the desired transparency. However such a structure is not preferred
because of its delicacy.
[0036] An open rod structure may also be formed using the principles given in a paper by
H. Matsuda and T. Matsuo entitled "A New Method of Producing an Electric Quadrupole
Field", published in the International Journal of Mass Spectrometry and In Physics,
No. 24, 1977 at page 107. By using such principles a quadrupole field can be produced
using a number of wires suitably located, and not necessarily in the same locations
as the usual solid rods themselves would assume. Such a structure can be used and
a gas target region created within it, provided that there is minimal interference
with gas escaping from the structure. The wires which produce a quadrupole field in
effect act as rods and the term "rods" in the appended claims refers to any groups
of open wires or other open structure which produces a quadrupole type field.
[0037] Preferably the transparency of the open rod structure used should not be less than
about 2/3, since below this value one-third or more of the gas molecules bounce off
the rod structure, scatter, and increase the load on the remaining quadrupole sections.
Preferably an openess or transparency of 90% or more is provided.
[0038] Reference is next made to Figs. 13 and 14, which shows an arrangement similar to
the apparatus shown in Figs. 1 and 2 of said U.S. patent 4,148,196 except for the
use of AC-only rod extensions, and which will therefore be described relatively briefly.
As shown, the Figs. 13 and 14 arrangement includes a vacuum chamber 202 which includes
an inner shell 204, an intermediate shell 206 and an outer vacuum shell 208. The inner
shell 204 includes spaced circumferential cooling fins 214 secured thereto and radiating
inwardly therefrom, and is in good thermal contact with inner cold station 215 of
refrigerating mechanism 216. The intermediate shell 206 is open at its rear and is
cylindrical in form with cooling fins 217 thereon and has a conical front 218 having
an enlarged axial opening 220 therein. The intermediate shell 206 is mounted on the
outer finger or second cold station 226 of the refrigerating mechanism 216. The outer
vacuum shell 208 has a cylindrical side wall 230 and front and rear walls 232, 233
respectively. The rear wall 233 is closed but the front wall 232 has a small central
axial opening 235 therein co-axial with the opening 220. The outer shell 208 forms
a gas tight enclosure around the inner and intermediate shells 204, 206 except for
the front opening 235.
[0039] Connected to the front face 232 of the outer shell 208 is a gas curtain chamber 236.
The gas curtain chamber 236 is closed, except for a curtain gas inlet orifice 238
at its edge walls, and except for central axial openings 240, 242 in its rear and
front faces. The openings 240, 242 are axially aligned with the opening 235 so that
ions can be transferred through the three openings into the vacuum chamber 202.
[0040] A sample gas containing trace components to be analyzed is introduced via inlet duct
244 into a chamber 246 which is fitted with a discharge needle 248. The trace components
are ionized directly by electric discharge from the needle 248, or the ionization
process may alternatively be indirect, through chemical ionization using one or more
chemical reagent gases included in the sample gas. The trace ions once formed are
drifted by appropriate potentials on the plates containing orifices 240, 242, through
these orifices and into the vacuum chamber 202. The sample gas itself is blocked from
entering the vacuum chamber by the curtain gas introduced via inlet 238 into the curtain
gas chamber. The curtain gas is a conveniently inert cryopumpable gas such as argon
and is admitted into the curtain gas chamber 236 at a pressure such that a portion
of the curtain gas effuses out of the opening 242 to block the gases in chamber 246
from entering the vacuum system, and these gases together with the portion of the
curtain gas which effuses out the opening 242, exit via duct 250. A portion of the
curtain gas enters the vacuum chamber with the ions to be analyzed and is cryopumped
by condensation on the fins 214.
[0041] As shown, a quadrupole mass spectrometer 252 is mounted on the rear surface 254 of
the vacuum chamber and is protected from the cold by insulation 257. Spectrometer
252 includes four conventional solid rods 256. A set of four open rod extensions 258,
formed of wires 30' exactly as shown in Figs. 7 to 12, extend forwardly from the solid
rods 256, being insulated therefrom by a small air gap or by insulating material 260.
The rod extensions 258 serve to guide ions entering the vacuum chamber to the mass
spectrometer 252 while at the same time permitting gas which enters the chamber to
pass through them to condense on the cooling fins 214. For this purpose the rods 256
are supplied conventionally with AC and DC voltages, e.g. from terminals 86 of the
Fig. 6 circuit, but rod extensions 258 are supplied with AC only, e.g. from terminals
98 of the Fig. 6 circuit. Again the AC voltages applied to both rod sets are synchronized
in frequency and phase so that the AC fields produced by both rod sets are synchronized
in frequency and phase, preferably with a zero or near zero phase shift as described
previously. The AC-only rod extensions 258 are preferably relatively long, so that
the ions pass through at least several complete cycles of the AC field (typically
at least six cycles or more) before they reach the solid rods 256. The AC only rod
extensions 258 substantially assist in guiding the ions into the solid rods 256 and
at the same time create little interference with the gas flow out of the vacuum chamber.
The front discs 140a which support the wires 301 are preferably slanted as shown to
reduce interference with the gas flow from orifice 235. If desired a declustering
element, shown in dotted lines at 264 in Fig. 13 and being as described in U.S. patent
4,121,099 can be placed between discs 140a and the orifice 235 to decluster ions entering
the vacuum chamber. Element 264 also deflects much of the gas flow entering the vacuum
chamber through orifice 235 away from the space between extensions 258.
1. A mass spectrometer system having a first quadrupole section (6;6';258) and a second
quadrupole section (8;8';252) comprising respectively a first set (14;14';258) and
a second set (12;256) of elongate rods in respective vacuum regions, the rods of each
said set being spaced laterally apart to define a longitudinally elongate space between
the rods for travel of ions, the sets of rods being arranged so that an ion may travel
through said spaces consecutively, there being means for applying voltages to said
sets of rods,
characterized in that:
said first and second sets (14,12 etc) of rods are located in the same vacuum chamber
(2;2';202) and the first set (14 etc) of rods is located end-to-end with the second
set (12 etc) of rods so that the said spaces for travel are linearly aligned, the
ends of the rods of the first set being located closely longitudinally adjacent the
ends of the rods of the second set while the rods of the first set are electrically
DC insulated from the rods of the second set, the said means for applying voltage
being adapted to apply an AC-only voltage to said rods of said first set and to apply
both AC and DC voltages to the rods of the second set and there being provided means
for directing gas into the space between the rods of said first set and means for
removing said gas from said vacuum chamber, at least a portion (14-2;30;30') of said
rods of said first set being of open structure to permit said gas to pass therethrough.
2. A mass spectrometer system according to claim 1 in which said rods of said second
set (12 etc) are each of solid construction and all of the same diameter and each
rod of said first set (14 etc) comprises at least partly a set of thin wires (30;30'),
each wire being of substantially smaller diameter than the diameter of a rod of said
second set, said wires (30) being arranged to produce an AC field (31) substantially
corresponding in configuration within said space of first set to that of the AC field
(31) produced in the space of said second set by said rods of said second set.
3. A mass spectrometer system according to claim 2 and including an end plate (32)
located at the end of said first set of rods (14) adjacent the end of said second
set of rods (12), said end plate serving to support said wires (30) and to reduce
longitudinal flow of gas from said first set of rods to said second set of rods, said
end plate (32) having an aperture therein to permit ions to travel therethrough.
4. A mass spectrometer system according to any one of the preceding claims wherein
each rod of said first set (14 etc) is aligned with a corresponding rod of the second
set (12 etc).
5. A mass spectrometer system according to any one of the preceding claims wherein
each said set of rods is a quadrupole set having four rods.
6. A mass spectrometer system according to any one of the preceding claims wherein
each rod of said first set (14) has a solid portion (14-1) of substantially the same
diameter as each rod of said second set (12), and said portion of open structure (14-2)
located end to end with said solid portion and electrically connected thereto.
7. A mass spectrometer system according to any one of the preceding claims wherein
said vacuum chamber (2) includes an inlet aperture (34), said means for admitting
gas comprising means connected to said chamber for admitting ions and said gas through
said aperture (34), said first and second sets of rods (14,12) being aligned with
said aperture (34) to receive said ions therefrom, said second set of rods spaced
from said aperture (34) and more remote from the aperture than said first set of rods.
8. A mass spectrometer system according to claim ? wherein said means for removing
said gas from said chamber (2) includes an interior surface (46) in said chamber and
substantially encircling said first set of rods, said gas being essentially a gas
which, when deposited in solid phase, has a vapour pressure substantially less than
atmospheric at a predetermined temperature, said means for removing said gas further
including refrigeration means (38) for cooling said surface (46) to said predetermined
temperature to deposit said gas in solid phase on said surface, whereby at least some
of said gas flows outwardly through said rods of said first set (14) and condenses
on said surface (46).
9. A mass spectrometer system according to claim 8 including means for precooling
said gas to a temperature substantially below room temperature but above said predetermined
temperature prior to introducing said gas into said space between the rods of said
first set.
10. A mass spectrometer system according to any one of the preceding claims and including
a third quadrupole section (4) comprising a third set of rods (10;10') in said chamber
(2;2'), the rods of said third set being spaced laterally apart a short distance from
each other to define a longitudinally elongated space between the rods of said third
set for ions to travel therethrough, said third set of rods being located end to end
with said first set of rods (14;141) so that said first set of rods is located between
said second and third sets and so that the spaces of all three sets are linearly aligned
for an ion to travel through all three said spaces, the ends of the rods of said third
set being located closely longitudinally adjacent the ends of the rods of said first
set, the rods of said third set being electrically insulated from the rods of said
first and second sets, and means for applying both AC and DC voltages to the rods
of said third set.
11. A mass spectrometer system according to claim 10 wherein the rods of said first
set of rods (14) each have a central solid portion (14-1) of substantially the same
diameter as each rod of the said two second sets of rods (10,12) and a pair of end
extensions (14-2) extending from each end of said centre portion, said end extensions
being of open structure.
12. A mass spectrometer system according to any one of the preceding claims wherein
said means for directing gas into said space between the rods of said first set includes
means for directing the flow of said gas substantially across said space, at a substantial
angle to the axis of said rods.
13. A method of operating a mass spectrometer system for analyzing ions, comprising:
(a) introducing said ions from a gaseous region into a vacuum chamber through an orifice
in said chamber, said orifice communicating with said chamber,
(b) maintaining a vacuum in said chamber and maintaining a gas in said gaeeous region
at a higher pressure so that said gas passes through said orifice and expands into
said chamber,
(c) directing said ions through a first set of spectrometer rods to a second set of
spectrometer rods for mass filtering in said second set of rods, characterized by:
(d) applying an AC-only voltage to said first set of rods and both AC and DC voltages
to said second set of rods, so that said first set of rods acts to guide said ions
into said second set of rods,
(e) and allowing at least some of said gas which enters the space between the rods
of said first set to escape through open spaces formed in each rod of said first set.
14. A method operating a tandem mass spectrometer system for analyzing ions, comprising:
(a) directing ions into an array of first, second and third sets of mass spectrometer
rods arranged in tandem,
(b) directing a target gas into the space between the rods of said second set to perform
ion fragmentation in said space, characterized by:
(c) applying AC and DC voltages to said first and third sets and an AC-only voltage
to said second set for said first and third sets to perform mass filtering and for
said second set to tend to guide ions and fragments thereof from said first to said
third set,
(d) and allowing at least some of said target gas to escape out of said space through
open spaces formed in each rod of said second set.