A research team from Brown University has developed a new method for transferring the ions that mass spectrometers analyze, dramatically reducing sample loss so that nearly all of it remains intact. "Basically, it's a process where you're really spraying your sample all over the place to produce these ions and only get a tiny portion of them into the mass spectrometer's vacuum for analysis,” said Nicholas Drachman, a physics Ph.D. student who led the work. “Our approach skips all of that." The key is a nanotube the researchers developed that has an opening about 30 nanometers across. For comparison, the conventional needle used in electrospray has an opening of about 20 micrometers across. The new nanotube also has the unique ability to transfer ions that are dissolved in water directly into the vacuum of a mass spectrometer, rather than producing a spray of droplets that must be dried out to access the ions.
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