1987
DOI: 10.1021/ac00140a021
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Instrumentation, applications, and energy deposition in quadrupole ion-trap tandem mass spectrometry

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Cited by 485 publications
(308 citation statements)
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“…These improvements include a wider mass range (up to 650 amu), a factor of twenty increase in sensitivity [12] even while acquiring full mass spectra during each cycle (as opposed to linear quadrupole selected-mass monitoring), and the possibility of performing multiple-stage mass spectrometry (MS/MS [15] and MS n [16]). Packaging the ion trap for underwater use, however, required substantial redesign in comparison to the quadrupole mass filter (discussed below).…”
Section: Underwater Membrane Introduction/ion Trap Mass Spectrometer mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These improvements include a wider mass range (up to 650 amu), a factor of twenty increase in sensitivity [12] even while acquiring full mass spectra during each cycle (as opposed to linear quadrupole selected-mass monitoring), and the possibility of performing multiple-stage mass spectrometry (MS/MS [15] and MS n [16]). Packaging the ion trap for underwater use, however, required substantial redesign in comparison to the quadrupole mass filter (discussed below).…”
Section: Underwater Membrane Introduction/ion Trap Mass Spectrometer mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A widely used activation method is collisional activation in quadrupole ion traps [14]. This is a very slow activation method with activation times approaching a fraction of a second and with low-energy-transfer to the reactant ions [12,13].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With conventional resonance excitation CID ions fragment while the excitation voltage is still being applied whereas for "fast excitation" CID a higher proportion of the ions fragment in the ion cooling time following the excitation pulse. The fragmentation of the (M ϩ 17H) 17ϩ of horse heart myoglobin is also shown to illustrate the application of "fast excitation" CID to [1] by applying to the end-cap electrodes a small supplementary RF voltage, at the same secular frequency as the ion of interest. This produces an increased amplitude of ion motion for ions of that particular mass-to-charge, which then fragment after collisions with the helium buffer gas.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%