System for Minimizing Electrical Discharge During ESI Operation
US-2019006165-A1 · Jan 3, 2019 · US
US11837451B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-11837451-B2 |
| Application number | US-202318152684-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jan 10, 2023 |
| Priority date | Nov 21, 2019 |
| Publication date | Dec 5, 2023 |
| Grant date | Dec 5, 2023 |
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A method for cleaning an electrospray emitter of a mass spectrometer comprises the steps of: (a) changing a mode of operation of the electrospray emitter from a stable jet mode of operation to a dripping mode or a pulsating mode of operation by lowering a magnitude, |V|, of a voltage applied between a counter electrode and the electrospray emitter; and (b) changing the mode of operation of the electrospray emitter from the dripping mode or the pulsating mode of operation to the stable jet mode of operation by increasing the magnitude, |V|, of the applied voltage; wherein the repetitions are performed at a predetermined frequency that depends on one or more of liquid flow rate, an emitter internal diameter, and liquid properties.
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What is claimed is: 1. A method for cleaning an electrospray emitter of a mass spectrometer, comprising, while causing a cleaning solvent to flow through the electrospray emitter, repeatedly performing the steps of: (a) changing a mode of operation of the electrospray emitter from a stable jet mode of operation to a dripping mode or a pulsating mode of operation by lowering a magnitude, |V|, of a voltage applied between a counter electrode and the electrospray emitter; and (b) changing the mode of operation of the electrospray emitter from the dripping mode or the pulsating mode of operation to the stable jet mode of operation by increasing the magnitude, |V|, of the applied voltage; wherein the repetitions are performed at a predetermined frequency that depends on one or more of liquid flow rate, an emitter internal diameter, and liquid properties. 2. A method for cleaning an electrospray emitter of a mass spectrometer as recited in claim 1 , wherein the frequency is within the range 0.01 Hertz to 100 Hertz. 3. A method for cleaning an electrospray emitter of a mass spectrometer as recited in claim 1 , further comprising directing a pulse of gas towards the electrospray emitter during each repetition of the steps (a) and (b). 4. A method for cleaning an electrospray emitter of a mass spectrometer as recited in claim 1 , wherein the causing of the cleaning solvent to flow through the electrospray emitter comprises causing a chromatographic mobile phase to flow through a chromatographic column to a coupling union and through the coupling union to the electrospray emitter, wherein the electrospray emitter, coupling union and chromatographic column are all housed within a removeable cartridge. 5. A method for cleaning an electrospray emitter of a mass spectrometer as recited in claim 1 , wherein the steps (a) and (b) are performed automatically upon the occurrence of a pre-determined number of injections of a sample or samples into the electrospray emitter subsequent to a prior cleaning of the electrospray emitter. 6. A sample introduction system for a mass spectrometer comprising: (i) an electrospray emitter configured to receive a continuous stream of sample from a sample source; (ii) a voltage source electrically coupled to the electrospray emitter; and (iii) a computer or electronic controller comprising computer-readable instructions that are operable to repeatedly perform the steps of: (a) changing a mode of operation of the electrospray emitter from a stable jet mode of operation to a dripping mode or a pulsating mode of operation by lowering a magnitude, |V|, of a voltage applied between a counter electrode and the electrospray emitter; and (b) changing the mode of operation of the electrospray emitter from the dripping mode or the pulsating mode of operation to the stable jet mode of operation by increasing the magnitude, |V|, of the applied voltage; wherein the repetitions of the steps (a) through (b) are performed at a predetermined frequency that depends on one or more of liquid flow rate, emitter internal diameter, and liquid properties. 7. A sample introduction system for a mass spectrometer as recited in claim 6 , wherein the computer-readable instructions that are operable to repeatedly perform the steps (a) through (b) are operable to perform the repetitions at a frequency that is within the range 0.01 Hertz to 100 Hertz. 8. A sample introduction system for a mass spectrometer as recited in claim 6 , further comprising: (iv) a gas supply; wherein the computer-readable instructions are further operable to cause the gas supply to direct a pulse of gas towards the electrospray emitter during each repetition of the steps (a) and (b). 9. A sample introduction system for a mass spectrometer as recited in claim 6 , wherein the computer-readable instructions are operable to automatically repeatedly perform the steps (a) through (b) upon the occurrence of a pre-determined number of injections of a sample or samples into the electrospray emitter subsequent to a prior cleaning of the electrospray emitter. 10. A sample introduction system for a mass spectrometer as recited in claim 6 , further comprising: (iv) a chromatographic column; (v) a coupling union fluidically coupled to both the chromatographic column and the electrospray emitter and disposed therebetween; and (vi) a removeable cartridge having therein the chromatographic column, the coupling union, and the electrospray emitter.
Step by step routines describing the use of the apparatus (H01J49/0081 takes precedence) · CPC title
Cleaning by the force of jets or sprays · CPC title
Cleaning by the force of jets, e.g. blowing-out cavities {(airguns or nozzles per se B05B1/005)} · CPC title
Cleaning the external surfaces {(B08B9/021 takes precedence)} · CPC title
Arrangements specially designed for simultaneous and parallel cleaning of a plurality of conduits · CPC title
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