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Cyclotrons

The most widely used type of trap for the study of ion-molecule reactivity is the ion-cyclotron-resonance (ICR) [99] mass spectrometer and its successor, the Fourier-transfomi mass spectrometer (FTMS) [100, 101]. Figure A3.5.8 shows the cubic trapping cell used in many FTMS instmments [101]. Ions are created in or injected into a cubic cell in a vacuum of 10 Pa or lower. A magnetic field, B, confines the motion in the x-y... [Pg.810]

The chapter is divided into sections, one for each general class of mass spectrometer magnetic sector, quadnipole, time-of-flight and ion cyclotron resonance. The experiments perfonned by each are quite often unique and so have been discussed separately under each heading. [Pg.1329]

B1.7.6 FOURIER TRANSFORM ION CYCLOTRON RESONANCE MASS SPECTROMETERS... [Pg.1354]

Figure Bl.7.18. (a) Schematic diagram of the trapping cell in an ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometer excitation plates (E) detector plates (D) trapping plates (T). (b) The magnetron motion due to tire crossing of the magnetic and electric trapping fields is superimposed on the circular cyclotron motion aj taken up by the ions in the magnetic field. Excitation of the cyclotron frequency results in an image current being detected by the detector electrodes which can be Fourier transfonned into a secular frequency related to the m/z ratio of the trapped ion(s). Figure Bl.7.18. (a) Schematic diagram of the trapping cell in an ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometer excitation plates (E) detector plates (D) trapping plates (T). (b) The magnetron motion due to tire crossing of the magnetic and electric trapping fields is superimposed on the circular cyclotron motion aj taken up by the ions in the magnetic field. Excitation of the cyclotron frequency results in an image current being detected by the detector electrodes which can be Fourier transfonned into a secular frequency related to the m/z ratio of the trapped ion(s).
In the other types of mass spectrometer discussed in this chapter, ions are detected by having them hit a detector such as an electron multiplier. In early ICR instruments, the same approach was taken, but FT-ICR uses a very different teclmique. If an RF potential is applied to the excitation plates of the trapping cell (figure B 1.7.18(b)) equal to the cyclotron frequency of a particular ion m/z ratio, resonant excitation of the ion trajectories takes place (without changing the cyclotron frequency). The result is ion trajectories of higher... [Pg.1356]

As with the quadmpole ion trap, ions with a particular m/z ratio can be selected and stored in tlie FT-ICR cell by the resonant ejection of all other ions. Once isolated, the ions can be stored for variable periods of time (even hours) and allowed to react with neutral reagents that are introduced into the trapping cell. In this maimer, the products of bi-molecular reactions can be monitored and, if done as a fiinction of trapping time, it is possible to derive rate constants for the reactions [47]. Collision-induced dissociation can also be perfomied in the FT-ICR cell by tlie isolation and subsequent excitation of the cyclotron frequency of the ions. The extra translational kinetic energy of the ion packet results in energetic collisions between the ions and background... [Pg.1357]

Mclver R T 1970 A trapped ion analyzer cell for ion cyclotron resonance spectroscopy Rev. Sc/. Instrum. 41 555-8... [Pg.1360]

Vartanian V H, Anderson J S and Laude D A 1995 Advances in trapped ion cells for Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry Mass Spec. Rev. 41 1-19... [Pg.1360]

Comisarow M B and Marshall A G 1996 Early development of Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FT-ICR) spectroscopy J. Mass Spectrom. 31 581-5... [Pg.1360]

Grover R, Decouzon M, Maria P-C and Gal J-F 1996 Reliability of Fourier transform-ion cyclotron resonance determinations of rate constants for ion/molecule reactions Eur. Mass Spectrom. 2 213-23... [Pg.1360]

Fisher J J and McMahon T B 1990 Determination of rate constants for low pressure association reactions by Fourier transform-ion cyclotron resonance Int. J. Mass Spectrom. Ion. Proc 100 707-17... [Pg.1360]

The reactivity of size-selected transition-metal cluster ions has been studied witli various types of mass spectrometric teclmiques [1 ]. Fourier-transfonn ion cyclotron resonance (FT-ICR) is a particularly powerful teclmique in which a cluster ion can be stored and cooled before experimentation. Thus, multiple reaction steps can be followed in FT-ICR, in addition to its high sensitivity and mass resolution. Many chemical reaction studies of transition-metal clusters witli simple reactants and hydrocarbons have been carried out using FT-ICR [49, 58]. [Pg.2394]

Microwave discharges at pressures below 1 Pa witli low collision frequencies can be generated in tlie presence of a magnetic field B where tlie electrons rotate witli tlie electron cyclotron frequency. In a magnetic field of 875 G tlie rotational motion of tlie electrons is in resonance witli tlie microwaves of 2.45 GHz. In such low-pressure electron cyclotron resonance plasma sources collisions between tlie atoms, molecules and ions are reduced and the fonnation of unwanted particles in tlie plasma volume ( dusty plasma ) is largely avoided. [Pg.2803]

Initially, the only means of obtaining elements higher than uranium was by a-particle bombardment of uranium in the cyclotron, and it was by this means that the first, exceedingly minute amounts of neptunium and plutonium were obtained. The separation of these elements from other products and from uranium was difficult methods were devised involving co-precipitation of the minute amounts of their salts on a larger amount of a precipitate with a similar crystal structure (the carrier ). The properties were studied, using quantities of the order of 10 g in volumes of... [Pg.443]

The use of larger particles in the cyclotron, for example carbon, nitrogen or oxygen ions, enabled elements of several units of atomic number beyond uranium to be synthesised. Einsteinium and fermium were obtained by this method and separated by ion-exchange. and indeed first identified by the appearance of their concentration peaks on the elution graph at the places expected for atomic numbers 99 and 100. The concentrations available when this was done were measured not in gcm but in atoms cm. The same elements became available in greater quantity when the first hydrogen bomb was exploded, when they were found in the fission products. Element 101, mendelevium, was made by a-particle bombardment of einsteinium, and nobelium (102) by fusion of curium and the carbon-13 isotope. [Pg.443]

Gr. technetos, artificial) Element 43 was predicted on the basis of the periodic table, and was erroneously reported as having been discovered in 1925, at which time it was named masurium. The element was actually discovered by Perrier and Segre in Italy in 1937. It was found in a sample of molybdenum, which was bombarded by deuterons in the Berkeley cyclotron, and which E. Eawrence sent to these investigators. Technetium was the first element to be produced artificially. Since its discovery, searches for the element in terrestrial material have been made. Finally in 1962, technetium-99 was isolated and identified in African pitchblende (a uranium rich ore) in extremely minute quantities as a spontaneous fission product of uranium-238 by B.T. Kenna and P.K. Kuroda. If it does exist, the concentration must be very small. Technetium has been found in the spectrum of S-, M-, and N-type stars, and its presence in stellar matter is leading to new theories of the production of heavy elements in the stars. [Pg.106]

Twenty five isotopes of polonium are known, with atomic masses ranging from 194 to 218. Polonium-210 is the most readily available. Isotopes of mass 209 (half-life 103 years) and mass 208 (half-life 2.9 years) can be prepared by alpha, proton, or deuteron bombardment of lead or bismuth in a cyclotron, but these are expensive to produce. [Pg.149]

At Dubna, 280-MeV ions of 54Gr from the 310-cm cyclotron were used to strike targets of 206Pb, 207Pb, and 208Pb, in separate runs. Foils exposed to a rotating target disc were used to detect spontaneous fission activities. The foils were etched and examined microscopically to detect the number of fission tracks and the half-life of the fission activity. [Pg.162]

Planet pluto) Plutonium was the second transuranium element of the actinide series to be discovered. The isotope 238pu was produced in 1940 by Seaborg, McMillan, Kennedy, and Wahl by deuteron bombardment of uranium in the 60-inch cyclotron at Berkeley, California. Plutonium also exists in trace quantities in naturally occurring uranium ores. It is formed in much the same manner as neptunium, by irradiation of natural uranium with the neutrons which are present. [Pg.204]

Dmitri Mendeleev) Mendelevium, the ninth transuranium element of the actinide series discovered, was first identified by Ghiorso, Harvey, Choppin, Thompson, and Seaborg in early in 1955 during the bombardment of the isotope 253Es with helium ions in the Berkeley 60-inch cyclotron. The isotope produced was 256Md, which has a half-life of 76 min. This first identification was notable in that 256Md was synthesized on a one-atom-at-a-time basis. [Pg.214]

Ernest O. Lawrence, inventor of the cyclotron) This member of the 5f transition elements (actinide series) was discovered in March 1961 by A. Ghiorso, T. Sikkeland, A.E. Larsh, and R.M. Latimer. A 3-Mg californium target, consisting of a mixture of isotopes of mass number 249, 250, 251, and 252, was bombarded with either lOB or IIB. The electrically charged transmutation nuclei recoiled with an atmosphere of helium and were collected on a thin copper conveyor tape which was then moved to place collected atoms in front of a series of solid-state detectors. The isotope of element 103 produced in this way decayed by emitting an 8.6 MeV alpha particle with a half-life of 8 s. [Pg.215]

Other types of mass spectrometer may use point, array, or both types of collector. The time-of-flight (TOF) instrument uses a special multichannel plate collector an ion trap can record ion arrivals either sequentially in time or all at once a Fourier-transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) instrument can record ion arrivals in either time or frequency domains which are interconvertible (by the Fourier-transform technique). [Pg.201]

In modem mass spectrometry, ion collectors (detectors) are generally based on the electron multiplier and can be separated into two classes those that detect the arrival of all ions sequentially at a point (a single-point ion collector) and those that detect the arrival of all ions simultaneously (an array or multipoint collector). This chapter compares the uses of single- and multipoint ion collectors. For more detailed discussions of their construction and operation, see Chapter 28, Point Ion Collectors (Detectors), and Chapter 29, Array Collectors (Detectors). In some forms of mass spectrometry, other methods of ion detection can be used, as with ion cyclotron instmments, but these are not considered here. [Pg.211]

Other types of mass spectrometer can use point, array, or both types of ion detection. Ion trap mass spectrometers can detect ions sequentially or simultaneously and in some cases, as with ion cyclotron resonance (ICR), may not use a formal electron multiplier type of ion collector at all the ions can be detected by their different electric field frequencies in flight. [Pg.212]

Other techniques for mass measurement are available, but they are not as popular as those outlined above. These other methods include mass measurements on a standard substance to calibrate the instrument. The standard is then withdrawn, and the unknown is let into the instrument to obtain a new spectrum that is compared with that of the standard. It is assumed that there are no instrumental variations during this changeover. Generally, this technique is less reliable than when the standard and unknown are in the instrument together. Fourier-transform techniques are used with ion cyclotron mass spectrometers and give excellent mass accuracy at lower mass but not at higher. [Pg.274]

Commercial mass analyzers are based almost entirely on quadrupoles, magnetic sectors (with or without an added electric sector for high-resolution work), and time-of-flight (TOE) configurations or a combination of these. There are also ion traps and ion cyclotron resonance instruments. These are discussed as single use and combined (hybrid) use. [Pg.280]

An added consideration is that the TOF instruments are easily and quickly calibrated. As the mass range increases again (m/z 5,000-50,000), magnetic-sector instruments (with added electric sector) and ion cyclotron resonance instruments are very effective, but their prices tend to match the increases in resolving powers. At the top end of these ranges, masses of several million have been analyzed by using Fourier-transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) instruments, but such measurements tend to be isolated rather than targets that can be achieved in everyday use. [Pg.281]


See other pages where Cyclotrons is mentioned: [Pg.236]    [Pg.253]    [Pg.340]    [Pg.810]    [Pg.810]    [Pg.1234]    [Pg.1355]    [Pg.1355]    [Pg.1357]    [Pg.2390]    [Pg.2802]    [Pg.2927]    [Pg.203]    [Pg.207]    [Pg.208]    [Pg.209]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.89]    [Pg.189]    [Pg.195]    [Pg.281]    [Pg.282]    [Pg.284]   
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AVF cyclotron

Accelerators cyclotron

Atom counting cyclotron

Berkeley 88-Inch Cyclotron

Biomedical cyclotrons

Charged particles, cyclotron acceleration

Classical cyclotron

Columbia cyclotron

Counting cyclotron

Cyclotron A device for accelerating charge

Cyclotron Berkeley

Cyclotron Frequency Bandwidth and Energy-Time Uncertainty

Cyclotron Motion - Excitation and Detection

Cyclotron bombardments

Cyclotron domain

Cyclotron effective mass

Cyclotron emission

Cyclotron energy, period

Cyclotron equation

Cyclotron experiments, early

Cyclotron facility

Cyclotron frequency

Cyclotron frequency, equation

Cyclotron invention

Cyclotron irradiation

Cyclotron maser

Cyclotron mass

Cyclotron mass spectrometers

Cyclotron motion

Cyclotron motion equation

Cyclotron nuclear reactions

Cyclotron nuclear transformer

Cyclotron operation

Cyclotron orbit

Cyclotron production of radionuclides

Cyclotron products

Cyclotron puzzles

Cyclotron radioactive elements production

Cyclotron radioisotope production

Cyclotron radionuclides

Cyclotron resonance

Cyclotron resonance analyzer

Cyclotron resonance frequency

Cyclotron resonance mode

Cyclotron solutions

Cyclotron targets

Cyclotron trap

Cyclotron, types

Cyclotrons, Synchrotrons, and Rings

ESI-fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance

ESI—Fourier-transform ion cyclotron

Electron Cyclotron Resonance (ECR) CVD Reactor

Electron Cyclotron Resonance in Plasmas

Electron and ion cyclotron resonance studies

Electron cyclotron heating

Electron cyclotron resonance

Electron cyclotron resonance chemical vapor

Electron cyclotron resonance chemical vapor deposition

Electron cyclotron resonance ion sources

Electron cyclotron resonance ion trap

Electron cyclotron wave resonance

Electron-cyclotron resonance, ECR

Electron-cyclotron-resonance plasma

Electrospray Fourier transform-ion cyclotron

Electrospray ionization Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance

Electrospray ionization-fourier transform ion cyclotron

Electrospray ionization-fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance-mass spectrometry

FT-ICR (Fourier transform-ion cyclotron

FT-ICR cyclotron resonance

FTICR (Fourier transform ion cyclotron

FTICR cyclotron resonance

Fourier Transform Ion Cyclotron Resonance Spectroscopy

Fourier Transform-ion cyclotron resonance FT-ICR) mass spectrometry

Fourier transform ion cyclotron

Fourier transform ion cyclotron mass

Fourier transform ion cyclotron mass spectrometer

Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance FTICR)

Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance FTICR) mass spectrometers

Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance FTICR) mass spectrometry

Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance MS

Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass

Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectra

Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometer

Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance spectrometer

Fourier transform ion cyclotron spectrometry

Fourier transform-ion cyclotron resonance FT-ICR)

Fourier transform-ion cyclotron resonance spectrometry

Fourier-transform ion cyclotron mass spectroscopy

Fourier-transform ion cyclotron resonance

Fourier-transform ion cyclotron resonance instruments

Fourier-transform ion-cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry

Ion cyclotron

Ion cyclotron experiments

Ion cyclotron resonance

Ion cyclotron resonance (ICR

Ion cyclotron resonance ICR) spectrometer

Ion cyclotron resonance analysers (ICRMS)

Ion cyclotron resonance analyzer

Ion cyclotron resonance cells

Ion cyclotron resonance experiment

Ion cyclotron resonance instrument

Ion cyclotron resonance mass

Ion cyclotron resonance mass analyzer

Ion cyclotron resonance mass spectra

Ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometr

Ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry

Ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry ICR-MS)

Ion cyclotron resonance mass spectroscopy

Ion cyclotron resonance spectrometry

Ion cyclotron resonance spectroscopy

Ion cyclotron resonance spectroscopy, and

Ion cyclotron resonance studies

Ion cyclotron resonance technique

Ion cyclotron resonance trap

Ion cyclotron resonance, Fourier

Ion-cyclotron motion

Isochronous cyclotron

Laser ablation Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance

Magnetic and Electrostatic Field Ion Cyclotron Resonance (ICR) Analyzers

Magnetron Motion and Reduced Cyclotron Frequency

Mass Analysis in Fourier Transform Ion Cyclotron Resonance Instruments

Mass Spectrometry and Ion Cyclotron Resonance Studies

Mass spectrometry Fourier transform ion cyclotron

Mass spectrometry Fourier transformed ion cyclotron resonance

Medical cyclotrons

Metastable ion cyclotron resonance

Microwave electron cyclotron resonance

Philips cyclotron

Principle of Ion Cyclotron Resonance

Pulsed ion cyclotron resonance

Reduced cyclotron frequency

SUBJECTS cyclotron

SWIFT cyclotron resonance

Schematic of a cyclotron

Sector focused cyclotron

Spectrometers, ion-cyclotron resonance

Synchro-cyclotron

The Cyclotron

Trapped ion cyclotron resonance

University of California Cyclotrons

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