4.5 Article

Peak Coalescence, Spontaneous Loss of Coherence, and Quantification of the Relative Abundances of Two Species in the Plasma Regime: Particle-In-Cell Modeling of Fourier Transform Ion Cyclotron Resonance Mass Spectrometry

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR MASS SPECTROMETRY
Volume 21, Issue 10, Pages 1712-1719

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jasms.2010.06.004

Keywords

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Funding

  1. College of Physical and Mathematical Science of Brigham Young University
  2. Copley funding

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Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FTICR-MS) is often limited by space-charge effects. Previously, particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations have been used to understand these effects on FTICR-MS signals. However, none have extended fully into the space-charge dominated (plasma) regime. We use a two-dimensional (2-D) electrostatic PIC code, which facilitates work at very high number densities at modest computational cost to study FTICR-MS in the plasma regime. In our simulation, we have observed peak coalescence and the rapid loss of signal coherence, two common experimental problems. This demonstrates that a 2-D model can simulate these effects. The 2-D code can handle a larger numbers of particles and finer spatial resolution than can currently be addressed by 3-D models. The PIC method naturally takes into account image charge and space charge effects in trapped-ion mass spectrometry. We found we can quantify the relative abundances of two closely spaced (such as Be-7(+) and Li-7(+)) species in the plasma regime even when their peaks have coalesced. We find that the frequency of the coalesced peak shifts linearly according to the relative abundances of these species. Space charge also affects more widely spaced lines. Singly-ionized (BeH)-Be-7 and Li-7 have two separate peaks in the plasma regime. Both the frequency and peak area vary nonlinearly with their relative abundances. Under some conditions, the signal exhibited a rapid loss of coherence. We found that this is due to a high order diocotron instability growing in the ion cloud. (J Am Soc Mass Spectrom 2010, 21, 1712-1719) (C) 2010 American Society for Mass Spectrometry

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