Could Microplasma Ionization and Ultrahigh Mass Resolution Alleviate Chemical Separations for Elemental and Isotopic Analysis?
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.2533/chimia.2025.60Keywords:
Elemental analysis, Isotope ratio mass spectrometry, Micoplasma, Ultra-high mass resolutionAbstract
At the extremes, all analytical spectrometric measurements are limited by the resolution of the spectrometer system. Spectral overlaps, isobars in the case of mass spectrometry, can lead to the implementation of complex and time-consuming chemical separations to alleviate those interferences. In the area of elemental/isotopic mass spectrometry, use of sector-field instruments can provide a mass resolution of ~10,000, but still necessitate chemical separations. Described here is the coupling of the liquid sampling-atmospheric pressure glow discharge (LS-APGD) microplasma to ultra-high resolution Orbitrap mass analyzer systems to yield mass resolution values ranging from 70k to 1M. Resolution of this order, with commensurate improvements in precision and accuracy, holds the promise to affect elemental/isotopic determinations without the need for chemical separations.
Funding data
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U.S. Department of Energy
Grant numbers DE-NA0004142
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Copyright (c) 2025 R. Kenneth Marcus

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