AN IMPROVED METHOD FOR CAPTURING LASER-DESORBED IONS IN AN ION-TRAP MASS-SPECTROMETER - DYNAMIC R.F. TRAPPING

Citation
Gc. Eiden et al., AN IMPROVED METHOD FOR CAPTURING LASER-DESORBED IONS IN AN ION-TRAP MASS-SPECTROMETER - DYNAMIC R.F. TRAPPING, International journal of mass spectrometry and ion processes, 136(2-3), 1994, pp. 119-141
Citations number
58
Categorie Soggetti
Spectroscopy,"Physics, Atomic, Molecular & Chemical
ISSN journal
01681176
Volume
136
Issue
2-3
Year of publication
1994
Pages
119 - 141
Database
ISI
SICI code
0168-1176(1994)136:2-3<119:AIMFCL>2.0.ZU;2-R
Abstract
We have developed an improved method, dynamic r.f. trapping, for captu ring laser desorbed ions in a quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer (I TMS). Trapping efficiency is enhanced by over an order of magnitude ov er previous methods. A 308 nm excimer laser pulse desorbs the sample - trimethylphenylammonium iodide (TPA-I) is used in most of the work re ported - from a probe inserted through the ring electrode. The laser i s fired as the r.f. trapping potential (risetime about 175 mu s) is ap plied to the ring electrode. Laser desorbed ions penetrate the trap wh ile the trapping potential is low, but cannot escape because the r.f. potential rises substantially during their transit across the trap. Th e trapping efficiency is found to depend critically on the kinetic ene rgy of the laser desorbed ions, and on the r.f. amplitude, phase, and rate of change of the r.f. amplitude when the laser fires. Cation and anion signals are recorded as functions of coarse and fine steps in th e laser-to-r.f. timing. Coarse and fine timing steps test the effects of laser-to-r.f. delay and phase respectively. We also report effects on trapping efficiency of buffer gas pressure and composition (He neat versus He:Xe mixtures) and the amplitude of the ring electrode steady state r.f. potential. The delay and phase dependence of the experimen tal data is analyzed with reference to an effective potential barrier model. Differences in the phase and delay dependences for anions and c ations are attributed to differences in Debye shielding early in the e xpansion of the laser desorbed plume. Cation and anion mass spectra ar e presented for laser desorption/ionization of TPA-I and pyrene. For T PA-I desorption, reactions between laser desorbed cations and neutral TPA fragments in the early, high density portion of the laser plume le ad to production of high mass cations.