3–5 Feb 2010
Lawrence Berkeley National Lab
US/Pacific timezone
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Pixel Imaging Mass Spectrometry with fast pixel detectors

3 Feb 2010, 14:25
20m
Perseverance Hall (Lawrence Berkeley National Lab)

Perseverance Hall

Lawrence Berkeley National Lab

1 Cyclotron Road Berkeley CA, USA
Oral presentation Applications of intelligent detectors Applications of intelligent detectors II

Speaker

Dr Andrei Nomerotski (University of Oxford)

Description

We report on ‘proof of concept’ experiments in Pixel Imaging Mass Spectrometry (PImMS) using an ultra-fast frame-transfer CCD camera and also describe an intelligent CMOS sensor which is being developed for this application by the PImMS collaboration in the UK. PImMS is a combination of a traditional TOF mass spectrometry and of the ion imaging. Information provided by the ion imaging gives access to valuable structural information of the molecule under investigation, in addition to the normal mass spectrum. Recording of the 2D spatial information of the arriving ions allows to reconstruct the ion velocity distributions for separate ion masses and to correlate them to each other. The new PImMS sensor will be capable to time stamp up to four arriving ions per pixel during the 200 microsec acquisition cycle with 50 nsec resolution which should meet the demanding requirements for complete recording of mass spectra of complex organic molecules.

Primary author

Dr Andrei Nomerotski (University of Oxford)

Presentation materials