Tanouir Aloui , Rafael Bento Serpa , Daniel Ross , Scarlett Francini , Chris Wu , Kevin Lee , Kathleen Masse , Justin A. Keogh , Robert Kingston , Heeju Choi , Charles B. Parker , Jennifer C. Stern , M. Bonner Denton , Jeffrey T. Glass , Michael E. Gehm , Jason J. Amsden
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Mass spectrometers are essential instruments for in situ analysis of planetary materials. Ideally, a space flight mass spectrometer would have a mass range from ∼10 u to at least 500 u to enable analysis of organic molecules to aid in searching for the requirements for life; capability for high precision isotope ratios of carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, sulfur, and noble gases to understand solar system evolution and functioning; and ability to resolve isobaric interferences at low m/z such as CO and N2 to study planetary atmospheres. Despite the considerable progress in flight mass spectrometry since the 1970s, no single flight mass spectrometer has all these ideal characteristics. In this paper, we present a proof-of-concept super-resolution coded aperture cycloidal miniature mass spectrometer (SR-CAMMS) for planetary science. Design considerations and preliminary results are presented including: a mass range of 10–260 u with resolution of 0.5 u or better; the ability to resolve the isobaric interference between CO and N2 at m/z = 28 u using sampling-super resolution; and the ability to acquire isotope ratios with Poisson statistics limited precision. Thus, the instrument met all design considerations except mass range, which was expected to be 10–500 u; reasons for this discrepancy are discussed in the paper.
期刊介绍:
The journal invites papers that advance the field of mass spectrometry by exploring fundamental aspects of ion processes using both the experimental and theoretical approaches, developing new instrumentation and experimental strategies for chemical analysis using mass spectrometry, developing new computational strategies for data interpretation and integration, reporting new applications of mass spectrometry and hyphenated techniques in biology, chemistry, geology, and physics.
Papers, in which standard mass spectrometry techniques are used for analysis will not be considered.
IJMS publishes full-length articles, short communications, reviews, and feature articles including young scientist features.