Litcius/Paper detail

The emerging role of 3D-printing in ion mobility spectrometry and mass spectrometry

Héctor Guillén‐Alonso, Ignacio Rosas-Román, Robert Winkler

2021Analytical Methods20 citationsDOI

Abstract

3D-printing is revolutionizing the rapid prototyping in analytical chemistry. In the last few years, we observed the development of 3D-printed components for ion studies, such as ion sources, ion transfer and ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) devices. Often, 3D-printed gadgets add functions to existing mass spectrometry (MS) systems. Custom adapters improve the sensibility for coupling with ambient ionization and upstream chromatography methods, and sample preparation units optimize the following MS analyses. Besides, 3D-printer parts are suitable for constructing custom analytical robots and mass imaging systems. Some of those assemblies implement new concepts and are commercially not available. An essential aspect of using 3D-printing is the fast turnover of design improvements, which is motivated by permissive licenses. The easy reproducibility and exchange of ideas lead to a community-driven development, which is accompanied by economic advantages for public research and education.

Topics & Concepts

Ion-mobility spectrometryMass spectrometryIon-mobility spectrometry–mass spectrometryChemistryIonMass spectrometry imagingTandem mass spectrometryChromatographySelected reaction monitoringOrganic chemistryMass Spectrometry Techniques and ApplicationsIsotope Analysis in EcologyAdvanced Chemical Sensor Technologies
The emerging role of 3D-printing in ion mobility spectrometry and mass spectrometry | Litcius