US3898456A - Electron multiplier-ion detector system - Google Patents

Electron multiplier-ion detector system Download PDF

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US3898456A
US3898456A US491988A US49198874A US3898456A US 3898456 A US3898456 A US 3898456A US 491988 A US491988 A US 491988A US 49198874 A US49198874 A US 49198874A US 3898456 A US3898456 A US 3898456A
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scintillator
ion
dynode
pulse
electron multiplier
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Leonard A Dietz
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J49/00Particle spectrometers or separator tubes
    • H01J49/02Details
    • H01J49/025Detectors specially adapted to particle spectrometers
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01TMEASUREMENT OF NUCLEAR OR X-RADIATION
    • G01T1/00Measuring X-radiation, gamma radiation, corpuscular radiation, or cosmic radiation
    • G01T1/29Measurement performed on radiation beams, e.g. position or section of the beam; Measurement of spatial distribution of radiation

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  • ABSTRACT relates to an improved ion detector for use in mass spectrometers for pulse counting single ions which may have a positive or a negative charge.
  • the invention combines a novel electron multiplier with a scintillator type of ion detector. It is a high vacuum, high voltage device intended for use in ion microprobe mass spectrometers.
  • an electron multiplier was substituted for a scintillator detector in an ion microprobe.
  • the multiplier succeeded well in both the positive and negative ion detection modes insofar as background counts were concerned, i.e., a few counts per minute.
  • the novel electron multiplier-scintillation detection has been developed for conventional magnetic sector mass spectrometers or ion microprobes. It is designed for a beam of ions focused to a small spot size or to a narrow line image at the focal plane of a mass analyzer.
  • the basic concept is not limited to focused ion beams of kilovolts energy. With suitable modifications it should work equally well with unfocussed ion beams or with low energy ion beams.
  • the present invention relates to a novel. electron multiplier-scintillator ion detector for pulse counting positively or negatively charged single ions in mass spectrometers, for example, a 30-inch radius Dempster type mass spectrometer.
  • a special feature of the new detector is theconcept of an extended first dynode. More specifically, the conversion dynode and the five additional stages of the electron multiplier act as a single unit to convert each ion impact into .a pulse of 500 or more electrons, on the average.
  • the basic objective of this invention is to combine the best features of an electron multiplier detector with the flexibility of a scintillator detector so that either positively or negatively charged ions can be detected with very high efficiency and be pulse counted as single events. Very simply, what is desired is one pulse detected and counted for each ion that strikes the conversion dynode, while at the same time maintaining a low background counting rate in the detector.
  • FIG. I is a top plan view of the present ion detector system.
  • FIG. II is a more detailed view of the electron multiplier of FIG. 1.
  • the ion detector system includes a source of an ion beam, 1, which designates a series of mass spectrometer defining slits. Grounded defining slits 2 and 3 terminate the ends of an electrostatic analyzer 4 which functions to provide energy filtering of the mass-analyzed source ion beam.
  • the electrostatic analyzer 4 also serves as a beam deflector to guide the ion beam into an electron multiplier 5.
  • the electron multiplier 5 consists of a conversion dynode 7, and five stages of secondary electron multiplying dynod e's, a focus or deflector electrode 6 and a pair of curved deflector electrodes 23 and 24 (shown more 1 clearly in FIG. 2).
  • a mica insulating slab 8 is positioned at each end of dynodes 20 and 25 and electrodes 6, 23,
  • the ion beam enters the multiplier section 5 through a rectangular aperture 9 to impinge on the conversion-dynode 7.
  • the secondary electrons from the multiplier exit through a circular aperture 10 through a cylindrical accelerating lens 11 and a disc lens with cylindrical symmetry 12 onto a flat plastic scintillator surface 13.
  • the scintillator 13 is covered by a thin film of aluminum, 500-1000 A thick.
  • the secondary electrons are converted into photons in the scintillator l3 and then the photons are transmitted through a quartz light pipe 14 which is optically coupled to the plastic scintillator 13.
  • the light pipe 14 is supported by an.
  • a soft iron cylindrical magnetic shield (not shown) would surround the electron multiplier and scintillator assembly. It would extend from outside aperture 9 to beyond the scintillator l3. Vacuum seals, mechanical mountings and high voltage insulation of the light pipe and scintillator would follow conventional practice.
  • the conversion dynode 7 consists of a dynode holder 20 made of nonmagnetic stainless steel supporting a glass or other suitable substrate 22 covered by an oxide surface 21.
  • the oxide surface 21 which converts ion impacts into secondary electrons is a thin amorphous film of plasma-anodyzed aluminum oxide (Al- 0 of -200 A thickness, (1 A 10 cm). This film surface 2] gives a higher yield and a more sharply peaked pulse height distribution than that from an aluminum film or solid aluminum metal surface which has been oxidized by exposure to pure oxygen or air.
  • the focus or deflector electrode 6 may be made of Type 304 stainless steel.
  • the five curved dynodes designated 25 may all be made from CuBe alloy.
  • Resistors labeled 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, and 31 having the values set forth, namely: 300K, 230K, 175K, 135K,
  • K, 100K ohms form a voltage divider connected serially across pairs of the dynodes which supplies a geometric voltage division to the dynodes.
  • a linear voltage division i.e. equal voltages between dynodes, also works well.
  • the electron multiplier is designed to be floated at a nominal voltage such as lOKV from ground potential, to detect negative or positive ions respectively. Approximate electrode voltages are shown in FIG. 1 for both the negative ion detection mode and the positive ion detection mode.
  • an ion beam emerging from mass spectrometer slit 1 will be guided through the electrostatic analyzer 4 or other suitable electrostatic lens which acts as a deflector so that the beam impinges onto the conversion dynode 7.
  • the conversion dynode plus the five electron multiplying stages 25, act as a unit or extended first dynode to provide on the average more than 500 electrons per positively or negatively charged ion impacting the surface of the conversion dynode.
  • the cost in high voltage to accomplish this is small, about lKV out of the i lOKV in the electron multiplier.
  • the electron multiplier plays the role of an electronic preamplifier and provides virtually noiseless amplification of each pulse of secondary electrons from the conversion dynode.
  • a current gain of several hundred is sufficient to establish a favorable pulse-height distribution in the electron multiplier section of the detector.
  • These electrons pass through aperture 10, are accelerated to about 9KV energy and are focused onto the plastic scintillator l3. Conversion of these secondary electrons into photons in the scintillator 13, then back to photoelectrons in the photomultiplier tube 19 has little or no effect on the shape of the pulse-height distribution detected at the anode of the photomultiplier tube. This is true because the statistical multiplication process is determined in the first few stages of the electron multiplier. Any electron or photon amplification after the first few stages increases the DC gain of the system but does not noticeably change the shape of the pulse height distribution for a given ion species.
  • the surface film of the conversion dynode has been described as a plasma-anodized metallic film.
  • Thin oxide films of this type can also be formed by RF sputtering of pure oxides. Because the escape depth of ioninduced secondary electrons formed below an oxide surface is only of the order of A, an oxide film of 30-50 A thickness produces as high a yield as one several hundred A thickness. Therefore, the selection of the thickness of the film is a matter of choice.
  • a thin film of pure beryllium oxide may be an alternate choice for the oxide film, since it may provide higher secondary electron yields and more sharply peaked pulseheight distributions than presently is realized from an A1 0 surface film.
  • the sensitive area of the conversion dynode may be increased and venetian blind dynodes, transmission dynodes, mesh dynodes, or other secondary multiplication arrangements following the conversion dynode may be added.
  • One obvious application for the new detector principle is in quadrupole, monopole or similar rf mass spectrometers. In these spectrometers the energy of the mass-analyzed ions can be as low as a few tens of volts. Post-acceleration of these low energy ions into the kilovolt range is necessary for efficient detection by pulse counting or when using a secondary electron detector in the DC mode to measure very small ion currents. This detector could also be used to detect energetic neutral atoms.
  • a combined electron-multiplier ion-detector system for use in a mass spectrometer comprising:
  • an electrostatic lens which receives, deflects and focuses the ion beam into an electron multiplier, having an extended dynode unit consisting of a first conversion dynode and five additional electron multiplying dynodes,
  • a photomultiplier tube optically coupled to the second end of the light pipe.
  • the conversion dynode consists of a nonmagnetic dynode holder supporting a substrate covered by a thin amorphous oxide film surface.
  • the accelerating lens means consists of a cylindrical lens and a disc lens which act to accelerate the pulse of secondary electrons and focus the pulse onto the scintillator.

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Abstract

The invention relates to an improved ion detector for use in mass spectrometers for pulse counting single ions which may have a positive or a negative charge. The invention combines a novel electron multiplier with a scintillator type of ion detector. It is a high vacuum, high voltage device intended for use in ion microprobe mass spectrometers.

Description

United States Patent Dietz 1 Aug. 5, 1975 [5 1 ELECTRON MULTIPLIER-ION DETECTOR 3,602,709 8/1971 Hull 250/283 SYSTEM 3,774,028 11/1973 Daly 250/299 X [75] Inventor: Leonard A. Dietz, Schenectady,
[73] Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Energy Research and Development Administration, Washington, DC.
[22] Filed: July 25, 1974 [21] Appl. No.: 491,988
52 us. c1. 250/299; 250/281; 250/283; 250/368 [51] Int. C13. BOlD 59/44; GOlT 1/20; H01J 39/34 [58] Field of Search 250/368, 369, 281, 282, 250/283, 298, 299, 300, 213 UT, 489
[56] References Cited I UNITED STATES PATENTS 3,510,647 5/1970 Wood 250/281 NEG. IONS: POS. IONS:
Primary Examiner.lames W. Lawrence Assistant E.\-aminerT. N. Grigsby Attorney, Agent, or Firm-Dean E. Carlson; Bernice W. Freundel [57] ABSTRACT The invention relates to an improved ion detector for use in mass spectrometers for pulse counting single ions which may have a positive or a negative charge. The invention combines a novel electron multiplier with a scintillator type of ion detector. It is a high vacuum, high voltage device intended for use in ion microprobe mass spectrometers.
6 Claims, 2 Drawing Figures 15.5 KV +20 KV SHEET PATENTEU AUB 5 \975 m m z aaseAss PATENTED RUE 51975 SHEET mm mm by. v.
goow m XmOP m xmme ELECTRON MULTIPLIER-ION DETECTOR SYSTEM BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION In an ion microprobe mass spectrometer a finely collimated and focused'beam of energetic ions strikes a target surface. Secondary ions sputtered from the surface are mass analyzed and pulse counted in a particle detector which detects either positive or negative ions, but not both kinds simultaneously. Prior artdevices have had rather high background counting noise of -40 counts per second whereas the desired background is I count per minute or less. Few mass spectroscopists have background counting rates less than I count per second even after many years of experience with the operation. In an effort to improve prior art devices, an electron multiplier was substituted for a scintillator detector in an ion microprobe. The multiplier succeeded well in both the positive and negative ion detection modes insofar as background counts were concerned, i.e., a few counts per minute. i
The novel electron multiplier-scintillation detection has been developed for conventional magnetic sector mass spectrometers or ion microprobes. It is designed for a beam of ions focused to a small spot size or to a narrow line image at the focal plane of a mass analyzer. However, the basic concept is not limited to focused ion beams of kilovolts energy. With suitable modifications it should work equally well with unfocussed ion beams or with low energy ion beams.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION The present invention relates to a novel. electron multiplier-scintillator ion detector for pulse counting positively or negatively charged single ions in mass spectrometers, for example, a 30-inch radius Dempster type mass spectrometer. A special feature of the new detector is theconcept of an extended first dynode. More specifically, the conversion dynode and the five additional stages of the electron multiplier act as a single unit to convert each ion impact into .a pulse of 500 or more electrons, on the average.
The basic objective of this invention is to combine the best features of an electron multiplier detector with the flexibility of a scintillator detector so that either positively or negatively charged ions can be detected with very high efficiency and be pulse counted as single events. Very simply, what is desired is one pulse detected and counted for each ion that strikes the conversion dynode, while at the same time maintaining a low background counting rate in the detector.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS FIG. I is a top plan view of the present ion detector system.
FIG. II is a more detailed view of the electron multiplier of FIG. 1.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT Referring now to FIG. I, the ion detector system includes a source of an ion beam, 1, which designates a series of mass spectrometer defining slits. Grounded defining slits 2 and 3 terminate the ends of an electrostatic analyzer 4 which functions to provide energy filtering of the mass-analyzed source ion beam. The electrostatic analyzer 4 also serves as a beam deflector to guide the ion beam into an electron multiplier 5. The electron multiplier 5 consists of a conversion dynode 7, and five stages of secondary electron multiplying dynod e's, a focus or deflector electrode 6 and a pair of curved deflector electrodes 23 and 24 (shown more 1 clearly in FIG. 2). A mica insulating slab 8 is positioned at each end of dynodes 20 and 25 and electrodes 6, 23,
and 24. The ion beam enters the multiplier section 5 through a rectangular aperture 9 to impinge on the conversion-dynode 7. The secondary electrons from the multiplier exit through a circular aperture 10 through a cylindrical accelerating lens 11 and a disc lens with cylindrical symmetry 12 onto a flat plastic scintillator surface 13. The scintillator 13 is covered by a thin film of aluminum, 500-1000 A thick. The secondary electrons are converted into photons in the scintillator l3 and then the photons are transmitted through a quartz light pipe 14 which is optically coupled to the plastic scintillator 13. The light pipe 14 is supported by an. O-ring 15 in a vacuum wall 16 and is in turn optically coupled to a conventional photomultiplier tube 19 which is wired for pulse counting. A photon of light, denoted at 17, is shown striking a photocathode 18 of the photomultiplier tube 19.
A soft iron cylindrical magnetic shield (not shown) would surround the electron multiplier and scintillator assembly. It would extend from outside aperture 9 to beyond the scintillator l3. Vacuum seals, mechanical mountings and high voltage insulation of the light pipe and scintillator would follow conventional practice.
In FIG. II the electron multiplier 5 is shown in greater detail. The conversion dynode 7 consists of a dynode holder 20 made of nonmagnetic stainless steel supporting a glass or other suitable substrate 22 covered by an oxide surface 21. The oxide surface 21 which converts ion impacts into secondary electrons is a thin amorphous film of plasma-anodyzed aluminum oxide (Al- 0 of -200 A thickness, (1 A 10 cm). This film surface 2] gives a higher yield and a more sharply peaked pulse height distribution than that from an aluminum film or solid aluminum metal surface which has been oxidized by exposure to pure oxygen or air.
The focus or deflector electrode 6 may be made of Type 304 stainless steel. The five curved dynodes designated 25 may all be made from CuBe alloy.
Resistors labeled 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, and 31 having the values set forth, namely: 300K, 230K, 175K, 135K,
K, 100K ohms form a voltage divider connected serially across pairs of the dynodes which supplies a geometric voltage division to the dynodes. Alternatively, a linear voltage division, i.e. equal voltages between dynodes, also works well. The electron multiplier is designed to be floated at a nominal voltage such as lOKV from ground potential, to detect negative or positive ions respectively. Approximate electrode voltages are shown in FIG. 1 for both the negative ion detection mode and the positive ion detection mode.
Considering the operation of the electron multiplierscintillating ion detector system further, it will be seen that an ion beam emerging from mass spectrometer slit 1 will be guided through the electrostatic analyzer 4 or other suitable electrostatic lens which acts as a deflector so that the beam impinges onto the conversion dynode 7. The conversion dynode plus the five electron multiplying stages 25, act as a unit or extended first dynode to provide on the average more than 500 electrons per positively or negatively charged ion impacting the surface of the conversion dynode. The cost in high voltage to accomplish this is small, about lKV out of the i lOKV in the electron multiplier. The electron multiplier plays the role of an electronic preamplifier and provides virtually noiseless amplification of each pulse of secondary electrons from the conversion dynode. A current gain of several hundred is sufficient to establish a favorable pulse-height distribution in the electron multiplier section of the detector. These electrons pass through aperture 10, are accelerated to about 9KV energy and are focused onto the plastic scintillator l3. Conversion of these secondary electrons into photons in the scintillator 13, then back to photoelectrons in the photomultiplier tube 19 has little or no effect on the shape of the pulse-height distribution detected at the anode of the photomultiplier tube. This is true because the statistical multiplication process is determined in the first few stages of the electron multiplier. Any electron or photon amplification after the first few stages increases the DC gain of the system but does not noticeably change the shape of the pulse height distribution for a given ion species.
The surface film of the conversion dynode has been described as a plasma-anodized metallic film. Thin oxide films of this type can also be formed by RF sputtering of pure oxides. Because the escape depth of ioninduced secondary electrons formed below an oxide surface is only of the order of A, an oxide film of 30-50 A thickness produces as high a yield as one several hundred A thickness. Therefore, the selection of the thickness of the film is a matter of choice. A thin film of pure beryllium oxide may be an alternate choice for the oxide film, since it may provide higher secondary electron yields and more sharply peaked pulseheight distributions than presently is realized from an A1 0 surface film.
Various modifications of the present detector system may be made. For example, for unfocused ion beams or with low energy beams the sensitive area of the conversion dynode may be increased and venetian blind dynodes, transmission dynodes, mesh dynodes, or other secondary multiplication arrangements following the conversion dynode may be added. One obvious application for the new detector principle is in quadrupole, monopole or similar rf mass spectrometers. In these spectrometers the energy of the mass-analyzed ions can be as low as a few tens of volts. Post-acceleration of these low energy ions into the kilovolt range is necessary for efficient detection by pulse counting or when using a secondary electron detector in the DC mode to measure very small ion currents. This detector could also be used to detect energetic neutral atoms.
Tests with a lO-stage 56 AVP photomultiplier tube in the new detector gave an output pulse width of less than 3 nanoseconds full width at half maximum amplitude (FWHM). This suggests a resolution time of 10 nanoseconds or less for the overall detector and counting system.
What is claimed is:
l. A combined electron-multiplier ion-detector system for use in a mass spectrometer comprising:
an ion beam source,
an electrostatic lens which receives, deflects and focuses the ion beam into an electron multiplier, having an extended dynode unit consisting of a first conversion dynode and five additional electron multiplying dynodes,
an accelerating lens means connecting said electron multiplier to a scintillator detecting surface,
a light pipe, optically coupled at one end with the scintillator, and
a photomultiplier tube optically coupled to the second end of the light pipe.
2. The combination defined in claim 1 in which the conversion dynode consists of a nonmagnetic dynode holder supporting a substrate covered by a thin amorphous oxide film surface.
3. The combination defined in claim 2 in which the conversion dynode and the five additional dynodes act as a unit to convert a single ion impact into a pulse of 500 or more secondary electrons.
4. The combination defined in claim 2 in which the extended dynode unit is floated at a voltage of i IOKV from ground potential to detect negative or positive ions respectively.
5. The combination of claim 3 wherein the accelerating lens means consists of a cylindrical lens and a disc lens which act to accelerate the pulse of secondary electrons and focus the pulse onto the scintillator.
6. The combination of claim 5 in which the scintillator consists of a flat plastic surface covered by a thin film of aluminum which converts the secondary electrons to photons which in turn are converted to photoelectrons in the photomultiplier tube, undergo further charge amplification there, and are pulse counted in associated electronic circuits.

Claims (6)

1. A combined electron-multiplier ion-detector system for use in a mass spectrometer comprising: an ion beam source, an electrostatic lens which receives, deflects and focuses the ion beam into an electron multiplier, having an extended dynode unit consisting of a first conversion dynode and five additional electron multiplying dynodes, an accelerating lens means connecting said electron multiplier to a scintillator detecting surface, a light pipe, optically coupled at one end with the scintillator, and a photomultiplier tube optically coupled to the second end of the light pipe.
2. The combination defined in claim 1 in which the conversion dynode consists of a nonmagnetic dynode holder supporting a substrate covered by a thin amorphous oxide film surface.
3. The combination defined in claim 2 in which the conversion dynode and the five additional dynodes act as a unit to convert a single ion impact into a pulse of 500 or more secondary electrons.
4. The combination defined in cLaim 2 in which the extended dynode unit is floated at a voltage of + or - 10KV from ground potential to detect negative or positive ions respectively.
5. The combination of claim 3 wherein the accelerating lens means consists of a cylindrical lens and a disc lens which act to accelerate the pulse of secondary electrons and focus the pulse onto the scintillator.
6. The combination of claim 5 in which the scintillator consists of a flat plastic surface covered by a thin film of aluminum which converts the secondary electrons to photons which in turn are converted to photoelectrons in the photomultiplier tube, undergo further charge amplification there, and are pulse counted in associated electronic circuits.
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Cited By (32)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
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FR2388406A1 (en) * 1977-04-22 1978-11-17 Finnigan Corp NEGATIVE ION DETECTOR FOR MASS SPECTROMETER
US4267448A (en) * 1978-06-12 1981-05-12 Varian Mat Gmbh Ion detector with bipolar accelerating electrode
US4320295A (en) * 1979-01-23 1982-03-16 Commissariat A L'energie Atomique Panoramic ion detector
EP0066954A2 (en) * 1981-05-22 1982-12-15 Geoffrey William Ball Mass spectrometers
DE3206309A1 (en) * 1982-02-22 1983-09-15 Siemens AG, 1000 Berlin und 8000 München SECONDARY ELECTRON SPECTROMETER AND METHOD FOR ITS OPERATION
US4423324A (en) * 1977-04-22 1983-12-27 Finnigan Corporation Apparatus for detecting negative ions
EP0281413A2 (en) * 1987-03-06 1988-09-07 FISONS plc Mass spectrometer for positive and negative ions
WO1989000883A1 (en) * 1987-08-06 1989-02-09 Phrasor Scientific, Inc. High mass ion detection system and method
US4835383A (en) * 1987-08-06 1989-05-30 Phrasor Scientific, Inc. High mass ion detection system and method
USRE33344E (en) * 1977-04-22 1990-09-18 Finnigan Corporation Apparatus and method for detecting negative ions
US4972083A (en) * 1989-01-09 1990-11-20 Hitachi, Ltd. Post-acceleration detector for mass spectrometer
US4988868A (en) * 1989-05-15 1991-01-29 Galileo Electro-Optics Corp. Ion detector
US4996422A (en) * 1988-06-01 1991-02-26 Hitachi, Ltd. Mass spectrometer
FR2658361A1 (en) * 1990-02-14 1991-08-16 Nermag Ste Nouvelle Device for detecting and amplifying weak positive and negative ion currents
US5202561A (en) * 1990-06-13 1993-04-13 Finnigan Gmbh Device and method for analyzing ions of high mass
US5220167A (en) * 1991-09-27 1993-06-15 Carnegie Institution Of Washington Multiple ion multiplier detector for use in a mass spectrometer
US5374827A (en) * 1993-11-15 1994-12-20 Detector Technology, Inc. Bias for a conversion dynode in an electron multiplier
US5471059A (en) * 1993-02-12 1995-11-28 Fisons Plc Multiple-detector system for detecting charged particles
US5773822A (en) * 1995-11-30 1998-06-30 Jeol Ltd. Ion detector and high-voltage power supply
WO1998040907A1 (en) * 1997-03-12 1998-09-17 Gbc Scientific Equipment Pty. Ltd. A time of flight analysis device
WO2005008719A2 (en) * 2003-07-03 2005-01-27 Oi Corporation Mass spectrometer for both positive and negative particle detection
US20060011826A1 (en) * 2004-03-05 2006-01-19 Oi Corporation Focal plane detector assembly of a mass spectrometer
US20060097159A1 (en) * 2004-11-10 2006-05-11 International Business Machines Corporation Improved ion detector for ionbeam applications
WO2009144727A2 (en) 2008-05-30 2009-12-03 El-Mul Technologies, Ltd. Charged particle detection system and method
US20100193677A1 (en) * 2009-02-04 2010-08-05 Nu Instruments Limited Detection arrangements in mass spectrometers
WO2011048061A2 (en) 2009-10-23 2011-04-28 Thermo Fisher Scientific (Bremen) Gmbh Detection apparatus for detecting charged particles, methods for detecting charged particles and mass spectrometer
US20110095177A1 (en) * 2009-10-23 2011-04-28 Anastassios Giannakopulos Detection Apparatus for Detecting Charged Particles, Methods for Detecting Charged Particles and Mass Spectrometer
US20150187550A1 (en) * 2013-12-27 2015-07-02 Agilent Technologies, Inc. Electron multiplier for mass spectrometer
US20170207061A1 (en) * 2016-01-20 2017-07-20 Hitachi High-Technologies Corporation Charged particle beam apparatus and image forming method of charged particle beam apparatus
WO2018218308A1 (en) * 2017-06-02 2018-12-06 Etp Electron Multipliers Pty Ltd Improved charged particle detector
US10672597B2 (en) 2018-07-11 2020-06-02 Thermo Finnigan Llc Calibrating electron multiplier gain using the photoelectric effect
US11898974B2 (en) 2020-12-15 2024-02-13 Hitachi High-Tech Corporation Charged particle beam device, computer, and signal processing method for charged particle beam device

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US3510647A (en) * 1966-09-06 1970-05-05 Ass Elect Ind Automatic sensitivity control for a mass spectrometer
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Cited By (51)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
USRE33344E (en) * 1977-04-22 1990-09-18 Finnigan Corporation Apparatus and method for detecting negative ions
FR2388406A1 (en) * 1977-04-22 1978-11-17 Finnigan Corp NEGATIVE ION DETECTOR FOR MASS SPECTROMETER
US4423324A (en) * 1977-04-22 1983-12-27 Finnigan Corporation Apparatus for detecting negative ions
US4267448A (en) * 1978-06-12 1981-05-12 Varian Mat Gmbh Ion detector with bipolar accelerating electrode
US4320295A (en) * 1979-01-23 1982-03-16 Commissariat A L'energie Atomique Panoramic ion detector
EP0066954A2 (en) * 1981-05-22 1982-12-15 Geoffrey William Ball Mass spectrometers
EP0066954A3 (en) * 1981-05-22 1983-01-12 Geoffrey William Ball Mass spectrometers
DE3206309A1 (en) * 1982-02-22 1983-09-15 Siemens AG, 1000 Berlin und 8000 München SECONDARY ELECTRON SPECTROMETER AND METHOD FOR ITS OPERATION
EP0281413A2 (en) * 1987-03-06 1988-09-07 FISONS plc Mass spectrometer for positive and negative ions
US4810882A (en) * 1987-03-06 1989-03-07 Vg Instruments Group Limited Mass spectrometer for positive and negative ions
EP0281413A3 (en) * 1987-03-06 1989-09-27 Vg Instruments Group Limited Mass spectrometer for positive and negative ions
US4835383A (en) * 1987-08-06 1989-05-30 Phrasor Scientific, Inc. High mass ion detection system and method
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