Abstract
Low ionization yields in time of flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF‐SIMS) particularly from single cells and tissues are proving to be a significant limitation in allowing this technique to reach its full potential. A number of approaches including embedding the sample in water or spraying water above sample surface has shown great prospective for increasing the ionization yield by a factor of 10 to 100 through ‘proton mediated’ reaction. Based on this hypothesis, a water cluster primary ion source has been developed in collaboration with Ionoptika Ltd to generate giant water cluster ions (H2O)n+ (n = 1−10 000) using a similar supersonic jet expansion methodology as for argon cluster beams. The ion yields of arginine, cholesterol, angiotensin II and a lipid mix have been measured under static and high ion dose conditions using (H2O)5000+, (H2O)3000+, Ar3000+ and C60+ primary ion beams at 20 keV. An enhancement in yields up to a factor of around 4 is observed under water cluster impact, in comparison with C60+ at 1 × 1011 ions/cm2 ion dose, whereas this increases by around 10–50 times at high ion dose conditions. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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