The Application Notebook
Resistive glass tubes and plates are designed to guide ions by generating a uniform electric field. Photonis resistive glass products are composed of a proprietary lead silicate glass that has been specially processed to create a resistive layer at the surface. The resistivity can be varied over several orders of magnitude to suit the specific application.
Resistive glass tubes and plates are designed to guide ions by generating a uniform electric field. Photonis resistive glass products are composed of a proprietary lead silicate glass that has been specially processed to create a resistive layer at the surface. The resistivity can be varied over several orders of magnitude to suit the specific application.
Resistive glass is manufactured by using a hydrogen firing process to create an integral semi-conductive layer on the surface. This reduced lead silicate layer is typically several hundred angstroms thick. Resistive glass can be formed into plates, tubes, cylinders, sheets, washers, or other shapes. The products are resistant to scratches from light to moderate abrasions, and can easily be cleaned ultrasonically with water, acetone, methanol, or IPA without degrading the performance.
One application of resistive glass is capillary inlet tubes for atmospheric pressure ionization sources. Single capillary
inlet tubes made from resistive glass significantly improve ion transfer efficiency when compared to conventional quartz
inlet tubes. Voltage applied across nickel-chromium electrodes at each end of the inlet tube creates an electric field that
preferentially attracts either positive or negative ions. Polarity switching can also be accomplished more quickly than with conventional inlet tubes.
The properties of resistive glass help prevent ions from colliding with the tube walls and with each other, reducing ion loss and resulting in a more efficient sample transfer by forcing more ions into the mass spectrometer.
Photonis has also developed a multicapillary resistive glass inlet tube. A proprietary multibore extrusion process creates a circular array of six individual channels in the same footprint as a single capillary inlet tube (see Figure 1).
Figure 1: Photonis’ multi-capillary resistive glass inlet tubes offer six individual channels in a standard footprint.
Multicapillary resistive glass inlet tubes provide increased sensitivity by further improving ion transmission when compared to single capillary inlet tubes.
Tubes made from resistive glass can also be used in other mass spectrometry applications, such as for drift tubes, collision cells, ion mirrors, voltage dividers, or reflectron lenses.
Another application of resistive glass is for use in ion mobility spectrometry drift tubes. Resistive glass drift tubes operate on the same principle as capillary inlet tubes, and demonstrate a similar improvement in ion transmission. The solid tube body also provides containment for counter-flow gas, eliminating the need for an additional enclosure.
An increase in ion transfer efficiency by a factor of 100 has been reported from using PHOTONIS single capillary inlet tubes.
An increase in ion transmission of up to 10× using multicapillary tubes when compared to single capillary inlet tubes has been achieved by a leading mass spectrometer manufacturer, dramatically enhancing instrument sensitivity. Resistive glass multicapillary tubes therefore provide an increase in ion transfer efficiency of up to 1000ՠwhen compared to conventional quartz tubes.
A demonstrated improvement in ion transmission is also realized with the use of single-piece construction resistive glass IMS drift tubes when compared to traditional multipiece lens and ring assemblies.
Resistive glass reflectron tubes provided equal or better performance in an orthogonal TOF system. This comparison showed superior resolution, indicating better energy focusing, while spectra between the two were nearly identical.
Overall, resistive glass tubes offer benefits to a variety of mass spectrometer applications, many of which can be realized by replacing an existing tube with one made from resistive glass.
Photonis USA
660 Main Street, Sturbridge, MA 01566
tel. (508) 347-4000, fax: (508) 347-3849
Website: www.photonis.com
A Guide to (U)HPLC Column Selection for Protein Analysis
April 16th 2025Analytical scientists are faced with the task of finding the right column from an almost unmanageable range of products. This paper focuses on columns that enable protein analysis under native conditions through size exclusion, hydrophobic interaction, and ion exchange chromatography. It will highlight the different column characteristics—pore size, particle size, base matrices, column dimensions, ligands—and which questions will help decide which columns to use.
The Benefits of Custom Bonded Silica
April 1st 2025Not all chromatography resins are created equal. Off-the-shelf chromatography resins might not always meet the rigorous purification requirements of biopharmaceutical manufacturing. Custom bonded silica from Grace can address a wide range of separation challenges, leading to real performance improvements. Discover more about the latest innovations in chromatography silica from Grace, including VYDAC® and DAVISIL®.
5 Things to Consider When Selecting a Chromatography Silica
April 1st 2025Particularly in the pharmaceutical industry, drug purity isn’t just a goal – it’s essential for achieving safety, stability and efficacy. However, purification is easier said than done, especially with challenging molecules like DNA and RNA “oligonucleotides,” due in large part to their diversity and the range of impurities that can be generated during production. Enter DAVISIL® chromatographic silica, with a wide range of pore diameters and particle sizes to meet your specific application, performance and sustainability requirements. Before you choose the chromatography resin for your next purification application, take a look at these 5 considerations.
Automating Protein Purification: Efficiency, Yield, and Reproducibility
March 27th 2025Recent advancements in automated protein purification stress the importance of efficiency, scalability, and yield consistency. This eBook compares different purification platforms, highlighting their impact on downstream applications and demonstrating how automation enhances throughput and process control.