ELECTROSPRAY ION SOURCE FOR SPECTROMETRY USING INDUCTIVELY HEATED GAS
20230411137 ยท 2023-12-21
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
The invention relates to the generation of desolvated ions by electrospraying to be investigated analytically, e.g. according to the charge-related mass m/z and/or ion mobility. The cloud of highly charged droplets drawn from the spray capillary by a high voltage is usually focused and stabilized by a beam of nebulizing gas surrounding the cloud of tiny droplets. For a fast drying of the droplets, an additional desolvation gas is usually heated to a temperature of up to several hundred degrees centigrade and blown into the cloud of droplets. The invention particularly relates to the heating of the gas which is instrumental in the generation of desolvated ions as part of the electrospraying process without any mechanical or electrical contact between the heating power supply and the heater itself, but rather by heating the heater for the gas using electromagnetic induction.
Claims
1. A method for heating a gas in an electrospray ion source used for investigating samples analytically, which gas is instrumental in the generation of desolvated ions as part of the electrospraying of an analyte solution, wherein the gas passes, and receives heat from, a heating device which is heated without contact by electromagnetic induction.
2. The method for heating a gas according to claim 1, wherein the gas is an inert desolvation gas which is directed into a spray plume emanating from a tip of a spray capillary of the electrospray ion source upon being heated.
3. The method for heating a gas according to claim 2, wherein the gas is directed to intersect the spray plume.
4. The method for heating a gas according to claim 1, further comprising controlling a temperature of the gas by varying operating conditions of a power supply used to effect the electromagnetic induction.
5. The method for heating a gas according to claim 4, wherein the operating conditions of the power supply are adapted to a time characteristic of the analyte solution to be investigated analytically.
6. The method for heating a gas according to claim 5, wherein the adaptation of the operating conditions follows the time characteristic of the analyte solution during a substance separation run, the eluent of which is delivered as the analyte solution to the electrospray ion source.
7. The method for heating a gas according to claim 6, wherein the substance separation run is a liquid chromatography run or an electrophoresis separation run.
8. The method for heating a gas according to claim 4, wherein the power supply is a low voltage, high current AC power supply delivering an alternating current with a frequency between 1 kilohertz and 1 gigahertz.
9. The method for heating a gas according to claim 1, wherein electromagnetic induction is generated using a conductive element which is helically wound, the heating device being located within the inner width of the helically wound conductive element.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0022] The invention can be better understood by referring to the following figures. The components in the figures are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead being placed upon illustrating the principles of the invention (often schematically). In the figures, like reference numerals may designate corresponding parts throughout the different views.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0032] While the invention has been shown and described with reference to a number of different embodiments thereof, it will be recognized by those of skill in the art that various changes in form and detail may be made herein without departing from the scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
[0033] As briefly described above, the invention provides a method to heat a gas instrumental in the generation of desolvated ions as part of the electrospraying process without any mechanical or electrical contact between the heating power supply and the heater itself, using rather electromagnetic induction. A small conductive element having a plurality of windings, such as a short coil or flat spiral with only a few windings, is supplied with a low voltage, high current AC in the frequency range from about 1 kilohertz to 1 gigahertz, heating a metallic or otherwise conductive heater device inside a helically wound conductive element or near a flat or planar conductive element having a plurality of windings (e.g. spiral). The heat is generated within the material near the surface of the heater device by eddy currents induced by the alternating electromagnetic field. The eddy currents at the same time attenuate the electromagnetic field, so that it penetrates only a short way into the heater material. The field inside a metallic heater drops down exponentially; the depth of penetration until the field is fallen to 1/e (37%) is called skin depth or effective depth. As an example, a 50 kilohertz electromagnetic field produces a skin depth of 0.3 millimeter in a copper surface. For higher frequencies , the skin depth becomes thinner by 1/ (one over square root omega); for other materials with other electric resistivities , the skin depth becomes thicker by (square root rho). In ferromagnetic materials, heat is additionally generated by losses due to magnetic hysteresis.
[0034] The conductive element having a plurality of windings should be made from a material with low resistivity. It may be produced by a tube to have the possibility to cool it by a flow of cooling fluid, such as liquid or gas. It can also be made from Litz wire to reduce impedance losses and undesirable excess heating of the coil.
[0035] The heater device can be arranged inside a helically multiply wound conductive element, such as a coil, and may surround concentrically the spray capillary, however without any mechanical contact (self-contained). The heater device may contain channels for the gas to be heated. The gas should be an inert gas such as, for instance, pure nitrogen. The heated gas then may be blown as a desolvation gas into the cloud of spray droplets generated at the tip of the spray capillary. The desolvation gas should help to dry the droplets so that finally desolvated charged analyte molecules remain which can be investigated analytically in a downstream mass spectrometer, ion mobility spectrometer or a combination of both.
[0036] Inductive heating has the following advantages: The heating is very efficient and the heat is generated only where needed with minimum losses. The heater may be made very compact lowering the spatial requirement for such ion source. This also entails a low-thermal mass heating channel that can be heated or cooled very quickly, such that the heating temperature can be programmed within the time scale of chromatography separation to selectively optimize desolvation of each compound as they elute. Only the surface of the heater up to the skin depth is effectively exposed to the alternating electromagnetic fields. Current heater arrangements used in known electrospray ion sources can be greatly simplified thereby.
[0037] There are several possible embodiments for the form of the heater.
[0038] In a first embodiment, the heater device is simply a metallic or otherwise conductive hollow cylinder within the inner width of a helically multiply wound conductive element as shown in FIG. 1A. The metallic cylinder holds straight bores arranged in parallel, serving as gas channels. In special embodiments, the gas channels may not be straight but wind or otherwise meander through the cylinder wall, e.g. helically (
[0039] In a second embodiment, the heater may be reduced to a bundle of metal or otherwise conductive capillaries serving as the gas channels. The capillaries may freely run through the inner width of the coil (14). In a preferred embodiment, the capillaries (16) are embedded in a ceramic or otherwise non-conductive hollow cylinder (15), as shown in
[0040] In a further embodiment, the gas is conducted within non-conductive channels (19) in a ceramic or otherwise non-conductive hollow cylinder (18), and the heating is performed by a metallic or otherwise conductive material within the channels, such as a conductive porous material, e.g. by bundles of metal wool (20), as presented in
[0041] In a further embodiment, the heating device is a thin metallic or otherwise conductive plate (21) with gas channels (23) for conducting the gas to be heated, as presented in
[0042] This embodiment with a thin plate, heated by an adjacent conductive flat spiral, can be produced in such a way that the heater arrangement shows extremely little heat capacity due to low thermal mass. Such a device can be heated and cooled very rapidly; heating by induction from the flat spiral, and cooling by constantly supplied fresh gas. The device allows adjusting the temperature of the gas to the characteristics of the analyte ions generated by electrospraying. In a liquid chromatography run whose eluent is input to the electrospray ion source as analyte solution, or any other substance separation run, such as an electrophoresis separation run, the successively eluting analytes may be more or less sensitive to thermal fragmentation, and the temperature of the gas may be controlled accordingly in order to reduce the heat stress as much as possible.
[0043] Another alternative embodiment, shown in
[0044]
[0045] The invention has been illustrated and described with reference to a number of different embodiments thereof. It will be understood by those of skill in the art that various aspects or details of the invention may be changed, or that different aspects disclosed in conjunction with different embodiments of the invention may be readily combined if practicable, without departing from the scope of the invention. Furthermore, the foregoing description is for the purpose of illustration only, and not for the purpose of limiting the invention, which is defined solely by the appended claims and is meant to include any technical equivalents, as the case may be.