Doctoral Thesis
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This thesis describes recent developments in multi-reflection time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MR-ToF MS) with ions exhibiting large masses and mass differences at an MR-ToF setup at the University of Greifswald. A series of in-trap manipulation techniques to selectively retain or eject ion bunches of multiple species with disparate mass-to-charge ratios is investigated. These highlight the possibility to correct long-term flight-time drifts using a reference ion species far away in mass from the species of interest and also the ability to use such a pair to perform single-reference precision mass determinations. In both cases, the results obtained with disparate-mass ion pairs are comparable to those known from operation with isobaric species.
In addition, an in-trap photoexcitation technique is developed and applied to study the dissociation behavior of atomic bismuth clusters (systems of some number of bismuth atoms). Compared to previous works by other groups, the probed cluster-size range is expanded for both ion polarities, resulting in a more comprehensive picture of the underlying dissociation pathways. The known significance of neutral-tetramer breakoff is confirmed, however, evidence is also found for the loss of larger neutral fragments.
Lastly, the principle of tandem high-resolution MR-ToF MS is introduced. This new method allows the study of the change in dissociation behavior of the cationic bismuth octamer resulting from substituting one of its atoms for lead. It is found that the lead-doping opens new preferential fragmentation pathways that outstrip the dominant tetramer breakoff for this specific precursor cluster size. As a first proof-of-principle experiment, the case of the cationic octamer shows that tandem MR-ToF MS is well-suited for the investigation of compound clusters.
This thesis describes experiments with clusters stored in an electrostatic ion trap called Multi-reflection time-of-flight (MR-ToF) analyzer. These devices are established as mass separators and analyzers with high resolving powers and fast processing times. The objective was to characterize an experiment that utilizes such analyzer for cluster research, to this end a laser-ablation ion source was combined with an MR-ToF analyzer.
In the first part, an experiment scheme that combines two operating modes, namely in-trap lift operation and mirror operation, is presented and characterized for the present setup. For ion capture in-trap lift switching was employed and exit-side mirror switching for ejection with higher information content. Measurements were performed with small lead clusters to illustrate individual advantages of both techniques and the gain of combining them with focus on the ions’ ToF ejection window.
In the second part, a recently introduced method of ion separation by transversal ejection of unwanted species inside the trap was studied for the present setup. The ejection is performed by appropriate pulses of the potentials of deflector electrodes located in the trap. The various parameters affecting the selection effectivity and resolving power are illustrated with tin-cluster measurements, with resolving powers of up to several tens of thousands.
The third part presents the experiment in detail, with the construction of each component and measurements for its various performance parameters. Because the heart of the setup is the MR-ToF analyzer the characterization focuses on the trap. In addition, cluster ions were mass selected in the MR-ToF device and photodissociated. The charged fragments were stored and mass analyzed in a proof-of principle MS/MS experiment where both MS steps were performed in the MR-ToF operation mode.