Collision cell for tandem mass spectrometry
09685309 ยท 2017-06-20
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01J49/005
ELECTRICITY
H01J49/0031
ELECTRICITY
H01J49/009
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A method and apparatus for tandem mass spectrometry is disclosed. Precursor ions are fragmented and the fragments are accumulated in parallel, by converting an incoming stream of ions from an ion source (10) into a time separated sequence of multiple precursor ions which are then assigned to their own particular channel of a multi compartment collision cell (40). In this manner, precursor ion species, being allocated to their own dedicated fragmentation cell chambers (41, 42 . . . 43) within the fragmentation cell (40), can then be captured and fragmented by that dedicated fragmentation chamber at optimum energy and/or fragmentation conditions.
Claims
1. A mass spectrometry method, comprising: generating ions to be analysed; separating the generated ions into a sequence of ions separated in time in accordance with their mass to charge ratio; directing ions of a mass to charge ratio M.sub.i at an arrival time t.sub.i into an i.sup.th one of a plurality of N spatially separated parallel cell chambers within a fragmentation cell; directing ions of a mass to charge ratio M.sub.j, different from M.sub.i, at an arrival time t.sub.j, into a j.sup.th one of the plurality of N spatially separated parallel cell chambers; ejecting ions from each of the cell chambers to a mass analyser; and analysing ions from each cell chamber in the mass analyser; wherein ions of at least two different mass to charge ratios M.sub.i, M.sub.j are stored in respective ones of the spatially separated parallel cell chambers at partially overlapping times; and wherein an analysis duration for analysing ions in the mass analyser is greater than a difference in arrival times t.sub.jt.sub.i for adjacent ions.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein M.sub.i and M.sub.j each consist of a mass to charge ratio of a single ion species.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein Mi and M.sub.j each consist of a range of mass to charge ratios.
4. The method of claim 1, where at least one of ions of mass to charge ratios M.sub.i and M.sub.j is or are fragmented in the corresponding cell chamber.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of ejecting ions comprises: (a) in a first cycle ejecting ions of mass M.sub.N from an N.sup.th one of the cell chambers to the mass analyser; (b) in a subsequent cycle, once the N.sup.th chamber is empty transferring ions of mass M.sub.(N-1) from an (N1).sup.th chamber to the N.sup.th cell chamber; (c) in a further subsequent cycle ejecting the ions of mass M.sub.(N-1), now in the N.sup.th cell chamber, to the mass analyser.
6. The method of claim 5, further comprising: trapping ions ejected from the N.sup.th chamber in an RF storage device, and ejecting them orthogonally towards the mass analyser.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of ejecting ions to the mass analyser comprises: ejecting ions from each of the N cell chambers in a direction that is not towards any other cell chamber such that the ions from each chamber arrive at the mass analyser without first passing through any of the other chambers.
8. The method of claim 7, further comprising applying a pulsed voltage to the ion deflector to direct the ions to respective cell chambers.
9. The method of claim 1, further comprising employing an ion deflector to direct ions of the mass M.sub.i into the i.sup.th one of the cell chambers and to direct ions of the mass M.sub.j into the j.sup.th one of the cell chambers.
10. The method of claim 1, further comprising adjusting the energy of the ions prior to entry into the cell chambers.
11. A mass spectrometer; comprising: an ion source for generating ions from a sample; an ion separator for separating the generated ions into a sequence of ions separated in time in accordance with their mass to charge ratio and for ejecting the separated ions; a rastering device positioned to receive the separated ions ejected by the ion separator; a fragmentation cell including a plurality N of spatially separated parallel cell chambers; a mass analyser positioned to receive ions from the cell; and a controller configured to control the rastering device to direct ions of a mass to charge ratio M.sub.i received by the rastering device at an arrival time t.sub.i into an i.sup.th one of the plurality of N spatially separated parallel cell chambers, and to direct ions of a mass to charge ratio M.sub.j, different from M.sub.i at an arrival time t.sub.j, into a j.sup.th one of the plurality of N spatially separated parallel cell chambers; the controller being further configured to cause ions from each of the cell chambers to be ejected to the mass analyser; wherein the controller is configured to cause ions of at least two different mass to charge ratios M.sub.i, M.sub.j to be stored in respective ones of the spatially separated parallel cell chambers at partially overlapping times; and wherein an analysis duration for analysing ions in the mass analyser is greater than a difference in arrival times t.sub.jt.sub.i for adjacent ions.
12. The mass spectrometer of claim 11 wherein the cell further comprises a plurality N, of ion entrance apertures, each in communication with the ion entrance of a respective cell chamber.
13. The mass spectrometer of claim 11 wherein each chamber comprises an RF only multipole.
14. The mass spectrometer of claim 11, further comprising a linear trap positioned to receive ions ejected from each cell chamber, and configured to orthogonally eject ions toward the mass analyser.
15. The mass spectrometer of claim 11, wherein the ion separator comprises an ion trap.
16. The mass spectrometer of claim 11, wherein the mass analyser comprises one of an orbital trapping analyser or a time of flight analyser.
17. The mass spectrometer of claim 11, wherein the rastering device comprises an ion deflector including first and second deflector plates, and further wherein the controller is arranged to cause pulsed voltages to be applied to those deflector plates.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention may be put into practice in a number of ways and some embodiments will now be described by way of example only and with reference to the accompanying figures in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(7) Referring first to
(8) The first stage of mass analysis 20 may be one of an ion trap, such as a linear ion trap with radial or axial ejection, a time of flight (TOF) analyser of any known type, including but not limited to multi-turn and multi-reflection TOFs, an ion mobility spectrometer of any known type, or a spatially dispersing analyser such as a magnetic sector or distance-of-flight analyser.
(9) The first stage of mass analysis 20 ejects precursor ions. Ions of different mass to charge ratios, m/z, emerge from the first stage of mass analysis at different moments in time, or separate in time of flight downstream of the first stage of mass analysis. In either case, precursor ions of different mass to charge ratios arrive at a rastering device 30 such as an ion deflector at different times. The rastering device 30 deflects precursor ions with mass to charge ratios m.sub.1, m.sub.2 . . . m.sub.N into corresponding chambers 1, 2 . . . N of a fragmentation cell 40. Each mass to charge ratio m.sub.1, m.sub.2 . . . m.sub.N represents a single ion species having a single mass to charge ratio, or alternatively a range of precursor ions having a commensurate range of mass to charge ratios. Techniques for parallel analysis of multiple mass ranges using the arrangement of
(10) Each collision cell chamber 1, 2 . . . N is denoted as 41, 42 . . . 43 in
(11) Ions enter each fragmentation cell chamber and are fragmented there. The resulting fragments, and any remaining precursor ions, are stored within the respective chamber.
(12) The particular, optimal fragmentation conditions (energy collision gas, collision technique, slow, such as ETD, or fast as collision-induced dissociation)can be selected for each collision cell chamber in accordance with the anticipated precursor ion. The rastering device 30 is under the control of a controller 60 and may use information from calibration or ion optical modelling, or previous mass spectra, to control the distribution of the different ion species arriving at the rastering device 30.
(13) Once ions have been stored in the fragmentation cell chambers sufficient for the required degree of fragmentation, ions are ejected from the fragmentation cell 40 to a second stage of mass analysis 50.
(14) In the embodiment of
(15) Similar displacing DC voltages are sequentially applied to each of the remaining fragmentation cell chambers, so that the ion populations shift by 1 fragmentation cell chamber at a time towards the mass analyser 50, once the previous population has been ejected from the fragmentation cell chamber closest to the mass analyser 50.
(16) After the first shift of the different fragment ions from the fragmentation cell chambers 41, 42 . . . 43, the n-th fragmentation cell chamber 43, which is furthest from the mass analyser 50, is empty. Interleaving may then be carried out, whereby that n-th fragmentation cell chamber 43 is filled with either the same precursor species as was previously injected into that fragmentation cell chamber 43, or alternatively, a different precursor ion species. Thus, the embodiment of
(17) Turning now to
(18) Each of the fragmentation cell chambers 41 . . . 43 is preferably formed of an RF-only multipole filled with collision gas. The chambers function not only to fragment ions, but also to ensure collisional cooling of the fragments.
(19) The ions are deflected to a particular fragmentation cell chamber and traverse a differentially pumped volume labelled generally at 35 in
(20) Upon entering the fragmentation cell chambers 41 . . . 43, ions experience multiple collisions with collision gas, and fragment. A decelerating voltage between the entrance deflector 81 . . . 83 and the entrance aperture 41a . . . 43a of each fragmentation cell chamber may provide for an optimum collision energy alternatively or in addition to the optional energy lift 31. If non-collisional fragmentation techniques are used, then ions should enter the cell chambers at energies below fragmentation level. To simplify deceleration of ions by allowing higher energies at the entry and still avoiding fragmentation, light collision gases such as helium or hydrogen could be used. Fragments and remaining precursor ions are reflected at the far end of each fragmentation cell chamber by an appropriate DC voltage, and those ions subsequently lose energy through collisions so that they concentrate near the axis of each fragmentation cell chamber.
(21) Shifting of ions between the various fragmentation cell chambers 41 . . . 43 precedes as follows, with reference particularly to
(22) The DC offset on the rods 62, 63 . . . is raised relative to the DC offset on the rods 61. Suitably, the potential difference is 20-30 volts. The offset on the rods 61 is, in its turn, raised relative to a DC offset on electrodes 71, such as 5 volts. The electrodes 71 form a part of a curved linear trap, to be described below, which acts to permit orthogonal ejection of ions from the fragmentation cell 40.
(23) Each of the electrodes 61, 62, 63 . . . and 71 have RF voltages applied to them during the process of trapping and transfer. As a result, ions in the fragmentation cell chamber 41 are forced to move between electrodes 61 and 71 and into a curved linear trap 70 which is best seen in
(24) The mass analyser 50 may, in preference, be of the orbital trapping or time of flight type. For example, the Orbitrap mass analyser, or a multi-turn or multi-reflection time of flight mass analyser might be employed. Furthermore, each of the fragmentation cell chambers might be employed to store fragments from several precursors (preferably from considerably different mass to charge ratios), to increase throughput (multiplexing). Also, the transfer of ions from one fragmentation cell chamber to another might be accompanied by crude mass selection, as a consequence of the applied DC fields, and also further fragmentation, to yield further generation of fragments (MS.sup.N, N=3, 4 . . . ). This also allows activated-ion ETD and multi-stage ETD to be accomplished.
(25)
(26) In
(27) Ions within the first mass analyser are ejected so that they arrive at a rastering device 30 such that ions of different mass to charge ratio arrive at different times.
(28) A system controller 60 controls the rastering device 30 to direct incident ions to a chosen one of multiple fragmentation cell chambers 41, 42 . . . 43 within in a fragmentation cell 40. The fragmentation cell chambers 41, 42 . . . 43 are arranged in parallel as can be seen in
(29) Once ions have been injected by the rastering device 30 into a particular fragmentation cell chamber 41, 42 . . . 43, appropriate fragmentation conditions can be applied data dependently (that is, for example, as a result of pre scans, calibration and so forth), so that fragmentation of ions in a particular fragmentation cell chamber takes place under conditions that are optimised for the particular precursor ion species. For example, the collision energy for the particular ion species may be tuned to that ion species under the control of the controller 60. Energy lift means as described above in respect of
(30) Unlike the arrangement of
(31) The arrangement of
(32) Turning now more particularly to
(33) In the arrangement of
(34)
(35) In further detail, still referring to
(36) To address the problem of losses during deceleration of precursor ions to low energies, an Einzel lens 100 is integrated into each of the fragmentation cell chambers. A suitable lens is described, for example, for O'Connor et al, J. Am. Soc. Mass Spectrom.; 1991, 2, pages 322-335.
(37) The problems of differential pumping of the fragmentation cell can be addressed by the creation of elongated areas of pressure gradient having aspect ratios of channel length to inscribed diameter in excess of about 10-50. In the case the cell consists of a sequence of N apertures with gaps between them, the aspect ratio (AR) is around N.
(38) For example, for a system of 50 fragmentation cell chambers, each having an inner diameter (ID) of 4 mm, the pressure could be reduced from P.sub.c=3.10.sup.3 mbar in the nitrogen filled fragmentation cell 40, to a pressure P.sub.p=6.10.sup.4 mbar in the volumes labelled 101 and 102 in
(39) In addition to the conventional molecular flow, there is also jetting of ions over the direct line of sight from one pressure region to another, resulting in additional increase of pressure, to consider. However, for AR>10 and a pressure drop less than ten fold, this effect is negligible. However, regions 111 to 114 of
(40) It is desirable that ions are already decelerated at the start of the pressure gradient described above, and it is also preferable that the DC gradient is applied along the entire length of the fragmentation cell. On the output side of it, ions are already collisionally cooled so that they concentrate upon the axis of the fragmentation cell chamber, and might pass through a much smaller hole (for example, a hole having a 2 mm inner diameter). This allows the length of the region 114 to be reduced.
(41) It will be appreciated that various modifications to the foregoing preferred embodiments can be contemplated. For example, in the embodiment of
(42) Furthermore, in each of the embodiments described above, during trapping in the fragmentation cell chambers, ions might be subjected to electron transfer dissociation (ETD), electron capture dissociation (ECD), electron ionisation dissociation (EID) or other ion-ion, ion-molecule, ion-photon (e.g. irradiation by laser) reactions, metastable-atom dissociation, and so forth. Anions for ETD could be introduced either from the other end of the fragmentation cell, or via the same first stage of mass analysis 20 and rastering device 30.
(43) Moreover, it is to be understood that many different schemes for ion capture and fragmentation within the multiple parallel fragmentation cell chambers are envisaged. In one embodiment, for example, the controller 60 may control the rastering device 30 to direct precursor ions of only a single ion species/mass to charge ratio into a respective separate one of the multiple fragmentation cell chambers. Within each chamber, as discussed, each ion can be fragmented, or not, under conditions optimal for the particular ion species and charge state in the particular fragmentation cell chamber. In particular, whilst it may be that each (single) ion species in each fragmentation cell chamber 41 . . . 43 is fragmented (though optimally under different fragmentation conditions), in other embodiments, some but not all of the ion species in the fragmentation cell 40 are fragmented. Thus what is ejected from the chambers (either using the conveyor ejection scheme of
(44) In that case, the process can be repeated for multiple scan cycles, for the same or at least overlapping mass ranges from the ion source, but with different fragmentation schemes applied to the different scan cycles. For example, in cycle 1, with 50 fragmentation cell chambers, chamber numbers 1, 2, 5, 9 and 32 might receive specific precursor ions m.sub.1 m.sub.2 m.sub.5 m.sub.9 and m.sub.32 respectively (under the control of the controller 60 and the rastering device 30) but then store those precursor ions of masses m.sub.1 m.sub.2 m.sub.5 m.sub.9 and m.sub.32 in the respective chambers and subsequently eject them to the mass analyser 50 without fragmentation. The remaining chambers may fragment the ions of masses m.sub.3 m.sub.4 m.sub.6-8 m.sub.10-31 and m.sub.33-50. In a second cycle of the arrangement, for example, a different subset of chambers can fragment the same or a different set of precursor ions (for example, in scan cycle 2, precursor ions of masses m.sub.19-24 and m.sub.36 might instead be allowed to pass through the fragmentation cell 40 without fragmentation). As well or instead, different fragmentation conditions can be applied in different cycles.
(45) By taking this multicycle approach, and using different fragmentation parameters in each cycle, it is possible to deconvolve and decode mixtures of fragment and precursor ions in the mass analyser, and hence arrive at separate fragment and precursor spectra without the need to obtain these separately. That said, a single cycle is sufficient, particularly where the analyte is of known or suspected identity, and/or by judiciously selecting the chambers and their content precursor masses.
(46) Still further, whilst the invention has been described above, for the sake of simplicity and clarity of explanation, in the context of only a single precursor species having a single mass to charge ratio within each fragmentation cell chamber, the invention is by no means so limited. For example, the controller 60 and the rastering device 30 may together be configured to subdivide the precursor ions from the ion source and having a relatively broad mass range, into a plurality of segments some or all of which contains multiple precursor ions across a relatively narrower mass range forming a subset of the broad mass range (with some containing only a single ion species). Thus it is to be understood that reference to a mass, or a mass to charge ratio is intended to mean both a single ion species having a single mass/mass to charge ratio, and also a mass range containing two or more different ion species and/or two or more different mass to charge ratios (whether or not those different mass to charge ratios are discriminated during analysis, should they have a very similar m/z).
(47) The techniques for parallel processing of such segments containing multiple precursor speciesand indeed a more detailed explanation of some exemplary decoding strategies, where multiple cycles with differing fragmentation cell chamber fragmentation schemes are employed, are set out in our above mentioned co-pending application entitled Method of tandem mass spectrometry, filed at the UKIPO on the same date as the present application.