Publications (3)12.89 Total impact
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Article: Time of flight mass spectrometry imaging of samples fractured in situ with a spring-loaded trap system.
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ABSTRACT: An in situ freeze fracture device featuring a spring-loaded trap system has been designed and characterized for time of flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (TOF SIMS) analysis of single cells. The device employs the sandwich assembly, which is typically used in freeze fracture TOF SIMS experiments to prepare frozen, hydrated cells for high-resolution SIMS imaging. The addition of the spring-loaded trap system to the sandwich assembly offers two advances to this sample preparation method. First, mechanizing the fracture by adding a spring standardizes each fracture by removing the need to manually remove the top of the sandwich assembly with a cryogenically cooled knife. A second advance is brought about because the top of the sandwich is not discarded after the sandwich assembly has been fractured. This results in two imaging surfaces effectively doubling the sample size and providing the unique ability to image both sections of a cell bifurcated by the fracture. Here, we report TOF SIMS analysis of freeze fractured rat pheochromocytoma (PC12) cells using a Bi cluster ion source. This work exhibits the ability to obtain single cell chemical images with subcellular lateral resolution from cells preserved in an ice matrix. In addition to preserving the cells, the signal from lipid fragment ions rarely identified in single cells are better observed in the freeze-fractured samples for these experiments. Furthermore, using the accepted argument that K(+) signal indicates a cell that has been fractured though the cytoplasm, we have also identified different fracture planes of cells over the surface. Coupling a mechanized freeze fracture device to high-resolution cluster SIMS imaging will provide the sensitivity and resolution as well as the number of trials required to carry out biologically relevant SIMS experiments.Analytical Chemistry 08/2010; 82(15):6652-9. · 5.86 Impact Factor -
Article: A new time‐of‐flight SIMS instrument for 3D imaging and analysis
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ABSTRACT: We have built a mass spectrometer which utilizes a new method of time-of-flight analysis to provide rapid data acquisition with simultaneous high spatial resolution and high mass resolution. The mass analysis is performed by sampling the secondary beam into a two-stage time-of-flight system. This removes the requirement for a pulsed primary beam as a ToF reference. No tradeoff exists between spatial and mass resolution, and acquisition speed is not limited by the primary beam duty cycle.The analyzer comprises the combination of a shaped field buncher and a nonlinear reflectron. This configuration allows the inclusion of a collision cell and an intermediate time-of-flight selection gate. So, the analyzer can operate in ms–ms mode as well as in normal time-of-flight mode. The instrument is equipped with 40 kV C60 and liquid metal cluster primary beams, which can run in d.c. mode, or, when charge neutralization is required, in slow pulsed mode. Data acquisition is continuous, eliminating loss of data during depth profiling etch cycles.The instrument has an automated sample entry system with heating to 670 K and cooling to 105 K, and includes a novel method of freeze-fracture for tissue samples or other organic samples in aqueous suspension. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Surface and Interface Analysis 07/2010; 43(1‐2):506 - 509. · 1.18 Impact Factor -
Article: A C60 primary ion beam system for time of flight secondary ion mass spectrometry: its development and secondary ion yield characteristics.
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ABSTRACT: A buckminsterfullerene (C60)-based primary ion beam system has been developed for routine application in TOF-SIMS analysis of organic materials. The ion beam system is described, and its performance is characterized. Nanoamp beam currents of C60+ are obtainable in continuous current mode. C60(2+) can be obtained in pulsed mode. At 10 keV, the beam can be focused to less than 3 microm with 0.1 nA currents. TOF-SIMS studies of a series of molecular solids and a number of polymer systems in monolayer and thick film forms are reported. Very significant enhancement of secondary ion yields, particularly at higher mass, were observed using 10-keV C60+ for all samples other than PTFE, as compared to those observed from 10 keV Ga+ primary ions. Three materials (PS2000, Irganox 1010, PET) were studied in detail to investigate primary ion-induced disappearance (damage) cross sections to determine the increase in secondary ion formation efficiency. The C60 disappearance cross sections observed from monolayer film PS2000 and self-supporting PET film are close to those observed from Ga+. The resulting C60 efficiencies are 30-100 times those observed from gallium. The cross sections observed from C60 bombardment of multilayer molecular solids are approximately 100 times less, such that essentially zero damage sputtering is possible. The resulting efficiencies are > 10(3) greater than from gallium. It is also shown that C60 primary ions do not generate any more low-mass fragments than any other ion beam system does. C60 is shown to be a very favorable ion beam system for TOF-SIMS, delivering high yield, close to 10% total yield, favoring high-mass ions, and on thick samples, offering the possibility of analysis well beyond the static limit.Analytical Chemistry 04/2003; 75(7):1754-64. · 5.86 Impact Factor