Plasma discharge elemental detector for a mass spectrometer
Abstract
A material to be analyzed is injected into a mirowave-induced plasma discharge unit, in which the material is carried with a flow of buffer gas through an intense microwave energy field which produces a plasma discharge in the buffer gas. As the material exits from the plasma discharge, the material is sampled and conveyed along a capillary transfer tube to a mass spectrometer where it is analyzed. The plasma discharge causes dissociation of complex organic molecules into simpler molecules which return to the neutral ground state before they are analyzed in the mass spectrometer. The buffer gas is supplied to one end portion of the discharge tube and is withdrawn from the other end portion by a vacuum pump which maintains a subatmospheric pressure in the discharge tube. The sample material is injected by a capillary injection tube into the buffer gas flow as it enters the plasma discharge zone. The dissociated materials are sampled by an axial sampling tube having an entrance where the buffer gas exits from the plasma discharge zone. The sample material may be supplied by a gas chromatography having a capillary effluent line connected to the capillary injection tube, so that the effluent material is injected into the microwave induced plasma discharge. The microwave field is produced by a cavity resonator through which the discharge tube passes.
- Publication:
-
Patent Application Department of Energy
- Pub Date:
- June 1983
- Bibcode:
- 1983doe..reptT....H
- Keywords:
-
- Detection;
- Electric Discharges;
- Mass Spectrometers;
- Plasma Jets;
- Gas Chromatography;
- Microwaves;
- Patent Applications;
- Vacuum Pumps;
- Instrumentation and Photography