The influence of cone orifice diameter on ion transmission in solution and laser ablation ICP-MS
Optimal sampler and skimmer cone orifice diameter has been well developed for solution based inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) but is not fully understood for modern laser ablation (LA) systems. This research investigates the impact of various cone orifice sets and the effect they have on ICP-MS sensitivity using solution mode and whilst using a low-dispersion LA system. A wide range of elements between the masses 7Li and 238U and their oxides have been measured via solution nebulisation as well as NIST 610 glass reference material and multi-elemental gelatine microdroplets via laser ablation. For multi-elemental micro droplets, 7 out of 11 elements analysed showed a statistically significant increase in sensitivity when a reduction of cone orifice size of 0.1 mm was used, compared to the standard cone orifice size. Similarly, for the ablation of NIST 610, 7 out of 11 elements displayed a statistically higher sensitivity with a 0.1 mm reduced orifice size. This analysis has confirmed suitability of standard cone sets for nebulisation of homogeneous solutions whilst suggesting a slight reduction in cone orifice diameter improves ion transmission through the cones towards the mass spectrometer by up to 272% (NIST 610) or 124% (multi-elemental droplets) for LA-ICP-MS.
Funding
The Central England NERC Training Alliance 2 (CENTA2)
Natural Environment Research Council
Find out more...History
School
- Science
Published in
Journal of Analytical Atomic SpectrometryVolume
70Issue
7Pages
1726 - 1732Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)Version
- VoR (Version of Record)
Rights holder
© Royal Society of ChemistryPublisher statement
This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence. You can use material from this article in other publications without requesting further permissions from the RSC, provided that the correct acknowledgement is given.Acceptance date
2025-05-21Publication date
2025-05-22Copyright date
2025ISSN
0267-9477eISSN
1364-5544Publisher version
Language
- en