Chemical Characterization of Individual, Airborne Sub-10-nm Particles and Molecules

Abstract
A nanoaerosol mass spectrometer (NAMS) is described for real-time characterization of individual airborne nanoparticles. The NAMS includes an aerodynamic inlet, quadrupole ion guide, quadrupole ion trap, and time-of-flight mass analyzer. Charged particles in the aerosol are drawn through the aerodynamic inlet, focused through the ion guide, and captured in the ion trap. Trapped particles are irradiated with a high-energy laser pulse to reach the “complete ionization limit” where each particle is thought to be completely disintegrated into atomic ions. In this limit, the relative signal intensities of the atomic ions give the atomic composition. The method is first demonstrated with sucrose particles produced with an electrospray generator. Under the conditions used, the particle detection efficiency (fraction of charged particles entering the inlet that are subsequently analyzed) reaches a maximum of 10-4 at 9.5 nm in diameter and the size distribution of trapped particles has a geometric standard deviation of 1.1 based on a log-normal distribution. A method to deconvolute overlapping multiply charged ions (e.g. C3+ and O4+) is presented. When applied to sucrose spectra, the measured C/O atomic ratio is 1.1, which matches the expected ratio from the molecular formula. The spectra of singly charged bovine serum albumin (BSA) molecules are also presented, and the measured and expected C/N/O atomic ratios are within 15% of the each other. Also observed in the BSA spectra are signals from 13C and 32S which arise from 40 and ∼34 atoms per molecule (particle), respectively. Potential applications of NAMS to atmospheric chemistry and biotechnology are briefly discussed.