When operated as a standalone analytical device, traditional
drift
tube ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) experiments require high-speed,
high-gain transimpedance amplifiers to record ion separations with
sufficient resolution. Recent developments in the fabrication of charge-sensitive
cameras (e.g., IonCCD) have provided key insights for ion beam profiling
in mass spectrometry and even served as detectors for miniature magnetic
sector instruments. Unfortunately, these platforms have comparatively
slow integration times (multiple ms), which largely precludes their
use for recording ion mobility spectra, where sampling rates into
the 10s of kHz are generally required. As a result, experiments that
simultaneously probe the longitudinal and transverse mobility of an
injected species using an array detector have not been reported. To
address this duty-cycle mismatch, a frequency encoding strategy is
used to evaluate ion swarm characteristics, while directly capturing
ion mobility information using the Fourier transform. This apparatus
described allows the ion beam to be profiled over the full course
of the experiment and establishes the foundation to examine axial
and longitudinal drift velocities simultaneously