The use of Field Asymmetric waveform Ion Mobility Spectrometry (FAIMS) has rapidly grown with the advent of commercial FAIMS systems coupled to mass spectrometry. However, many fundamental aspects of FAIMS remain obscure, hindering its technological improvement and expansion of analytical utility. Recently, we developed a comprehensive numerical simulation approach to FAIMS that can handle any device geometry and operational conditions. The formalism was originally set up in one dimension for a uniform gas flow and limited to ideal asymmetric voltage waveforms. Here we extend the model to account for a realistic gas flow velocity distribution in the analytical gap, axial ion diffusion, and waveform imperfections (e.g. noise and ripple). The non-uniformity of gas flow velocity profile has only a minor effect, slightly improving resolution. However, waveform perturbations are significant even at very low levels, in some cases ~ 0.01% of nominal voltage. These perturbations always improve resolution and decrease sensitivity. Variation of noise or ripple amplitude produces a trade-off between resolution and sensitivity. This trade-off is physically equivalent to that obtained via adjustment of the gap width and/or asymmetric waveform frequency, but the scaling of low-frequency ripple appears to be a more practical way to control FAIMS resolution.
Revised: August 23, 2005 |
Published: July 7, 2005
Citation
Shvartsburg A.A., K. Tang, and R.D. Smith. 2005.FAIMS Operation for Realistic Gas Flow Profile and Asymmetric Waveforms Including Electronic Noise and Ripple.Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry 16, no. 9:1447-1455.PNNL-SA-44306.doi:10.1016/j.jasms.2005.04.003