One application of thermal ionization is
thermal ionization mass spectrometry (TIMS). In thermal ionization mass spectrometry, a chemically purified material is placed onto a
filament which is then heated to high temperatures to cause some of the material to be
ionized as it is thermally desorbed (boiled off) the hot filament. Filaments are generally flat pieces of metal around wide, thick, bent into an upside-down U shape and attached to two contacts that supply a current. This method is widely used in
radiometric dating, where the sample is ionized under vacuum. The ions being produced at the filament are focused into an ion beam and then passed through a magnetic field to separate them by mass. The relative abundances of different isotopes can then be measured, yielding isotope ratios. When these isotope ratios are measured by TIMS, mass-dependent fractionation occurs as species are emitted by the hot filament. Fractionation occurs due to the excitation of the sample and therefore must be corrected for accurate measurement of the isotope ratio. There are several advantages of the TIMS method. It has a simple design, is less expensive than other mass spectrometers, and produces stable ion emissions. It requires a stable power supply, and is suitable for species with a low ionization energy, such as
strontium and
lead. The disadvantages of this method stem from the maximum temperature achieved in thermal ionization. The hot filament reaches a temperature of less than , leading to the inability to create atomic ions of species with a high ionization energy, such as
osmium and
tungsten. Although the TIMS method can create molecular ions instead in this case, species with high ionization energy can be analyzed more effectively with
MC-ICP-MS. == See also ==