by
RAD » Sat Jan 09, 2010 1:11 am
Thanks again for your comments.
We currently have 3 assays running on our LCMS. Two of them use HFBA, the third does not. Both assays using HFBA have this problem of periodic loss of sensitivity, the assay which does not use HFBA has not shown this problem although we have not run that particular assay a lot so we may not have seen the problem because we have not run enough samples.
Both assays involving HFBA use plasma only so I cannot comment if we would see it with other samples. I suspect that we would see the problem, as we occasionally have had this issue in the middle of our aqueous standard curves, before any samples have actually been run.
We use a Nitrogen generator and have had no problems with N2 supply, it seems to work very well. We did switch to a tank of N2 for a while just in case this was an issue--the tank did not resolve the problem. We have changed the nebulizer needle and the probe itself recently but the problem is still there. The spray looks appropriate and forms a perfect looking cone so we have ruled out the spray as a possible problem.
We had several problems with this instrument recently and the service engineers have changed the source, cones, hexapole, collison cell, detector and removed and cleaned the quads and lenses. Our sensitivity improved about 10X after all these changes but we still face this dramatic drop in signal periodically. It is possible the HFBA is not the problem, but 3 service engineers have independantly questioned it as a potential problem, especially with the relatively high concentration that we use. I know it is quite sticky and stays around a long time and the engineers are postulating that it coats something and builds up until it causes a problem. I can believe this happens, but have trouble believing that a coating of ion pair reagent can suddenly reverse itself and the problem goes away without any cleaning--which is what happens. We stop running for the day and the sensitivity is back the next day.