Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9746588 | International Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2005 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
The use of static secondary ion mass spectrometry for the semi-quantitative characterisation of major components by means of molecule specific ion signals has been investigated for binary salts. The calibration of the peak intensities as a function of the local concentration has been based on reference mixtures. The preparation of the mixtures has been proven to be a major bottleneck. Five different approaches have been tried out. Fast freezing with subsequent cryo-lyophylisation is the preferred method to obtain adequate molecular mixtures for the empirical calibration of relative peak intensities in S-SIMS as a function of the local concentration. The applicability has been verified in two different laboratories and three instrumental S-SIMS configurations. Monoatomic as well as polyatomic primary ions have been used. Specifically, comparative work involved the use of Ga+ primary ions in a time-of-flight (TOF) S-SIMS and ReO4â polyatomic projectiles in an ion trap and a triple quadrupole instrument, used in the single mass selection mode. In all cases, the local content can be determined with an experimental uncertainty of 10-20% using the molecular (adduct) ion signal intensities in either the positive or negative ion detection mode.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Rita Van Ham, Luc Van Vaeck, Annemie Adriaens, Freddy Adams, Brittany Hodges, Anthony Appelhans, Gary Groenewold,