Miniature Mass Spectrometry: Theory, Development and Applications

As mass analyzer technology has continued to improve over the last fifty years, the prospect of field-portable mass spectrometers has garnered interest from many research groups and organizations. Designing a field portable instrument entails more than the scaling down of current commercial systems...

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Main Author: Fox, James D.
Other Authors: Verbeck, Guido
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of North Texas 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc407824/
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spelling ndltd-unt.edu-info-ark-67531-metadc4078242020-07-15T07:09:31Z Miniature Mass Spectrometry: Theory, Development and Applications Fox, James D. Miniature mass spectrometry Raman soft landing on mobility As mass analyzer technology has continued to improve over the last fifty years, the prospect of field-portable mass spectrometers has garnered interest from many research groups and organizations. Designing a field portable instrument entails more than the scaling down of current commercial systems. Additional considerations such as power consumption, vacuum requirements and ruggedization also play key roles. In this research, two avenues were pursued in the initial development of a portable system. First, micrometer-scale mass analyzers and other electrostatic components were fabricated using silicon on insulator-deep reactive ion etching, and tested. Second, the dimensions of an ion trap were scaled to the millimeter level and fabricated from common metals and commercially available vacuum plastics. This instrument was tested for use in ion isolation and collision induced dissociation for secondary mass spectrometry and confirmatory analyses of unknowns. In addition to portable instrumentation, miniature mass spectrometers show potential for usage in process and reaction monitoring. To this end, a commercial residual gas analyzer was used to monitor plasma deposition and cleaning inside of a chamber designed for laser ablation and soft landing-ion mobility to generate metal-main group clusters. This chamber was also equipped for multiple types of spectral analysis in order to identify and characterize the clusters. Finally, a portion of this research was dedicated to method development in sample collection and analysis for forensic study. A new method for the analysis of illicit chemistries collected via electrostatic lifting is presented. This method incorporates surface-enhanced Raman microscopy as a prescreening tool for nanoextraction and nanospray ionization mass spectrometry. University of North Texas Verbeck, Guido Petros, Rob Golden, Teresa D. Scharf, Thomas 2013-12 Thesis or Dissertation Text https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc407824/ ark: ark:/67531/metadc407824 English Public Fox, James D. Copyright Copyright is held by the author, unless otherwise noted. All rights Reserved.
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Miniature mass spectrometry
Raman
soft landing on mobility
spellingShingle Miniature mass spectrometry
Raman
soft landing on mobility
Fox, James D.
Miniature Mass Spectrometry: Theory, Development and Applications
description As mass analyzer technology has continued to improve over the last fifty years, the prospect of field-portable mass spectrometers has garnered interest from many research groups and organizations. Designing a field portable instrument entails more than the scaling down of current commercial systems. Additional considerations such as power consumption, vacuum requirements and ruggedization also play key roles. In this research, two avenues were pursued in the initial development of a portable system. First, micrometer-scale mass analyzers and other electrostatic components were fabricated using silicon on insulator-deep reactive ion etching, and tested. Second, the dimensions of an ion trap were scaled to the millimeter level and fabricated from common metals and commercially available vacuum plastics. This instrument was tested for use in ion isolation and collision induced dissociation for secondary mass spectrometry and confirmatory analyses of unknowns. In addition to portable instrumentation, miniature mass spectrometers show potential for usage in process and reaction monitoring. To this end, a commercial residual gas analyzer was used to monitor plasma deposition and cleaning inside of a chamber designed for laser ablation and soft landing-ion mobility to generate metal-main group clusters. This chamber was also equipped for multiple types of spectral analysis in order to identify and characterize the clusters. Finally, a portion of this research was dedicated to method development in sample collection and analysis for forensic study. A new method for the analysis of illicit chemistries collected via electrostatic lifting is presented. This method incorporates surface-enhanced Raman microscopy as a prescreening tool for nanoextraction and nanospray ionization mass spectrometry.
author2 Verbeck, Guido
author_facet Verbeck, Guido
Fox, James D.
author Fox, James D.
author_sort Fox, James D.
title Miniature Mass Spectrometry: Theory, Development and Applications
title_short Miniature Mass Spectrometry: Theory, Development and Applications
title_full Miniature Mass Spectrometry: Theory, Development and Applications
title_fullStr Miniature Mass Spectrometry: Theory, Development and Applications
title_full_unstemmed Miniature Mass Spectrometry: Theory, Development and Applications
title_sort miniature mass spectrometry: theory, development and applications
publisher University of North Texas
publishDate 2013
url https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc407824/
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