The method of thermospray ionization was first introduced by a patent evidenced as early as 1983, and described in further detail by a patent published on March 8, 1988. Inventors Marvin L. Vestal and Calvin R. Blakley proposed an ion vapor source for mass spectrometry of liquids under a US Grant from the
Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. The proposed method detailed a coupling device between liquid chromatographic columns and various methods of detection for gaseous samples; like mass spectrometry,
electron capture, atomic
adsorption, etc. Four different representations of the thermospray vaporizer were presented in the 1988 patent – UA4730111A. Nonvolatile, ionic, and thermally labile solutes were investigated with the various control systems on the vaporizers to achieve partial vaporization.
First representation A copper vaporizer block is electrically heated with two 100 watt cartridge heaters and a stainless steel capillary allow introduction of sample and consequent partial vaporization. The capillary and the vaporizer block are soldered together to ensure stable thermal contact. The resultant supersonic jet then passes through the ion source for introduction into the
quadrupole mass spectrometer.
Second representation The construction of the second representation is fundamentally the same as the first; however, temperature and pressure sensors were implemented such that they could control the power to obtain both constant temperature and pressure for ideal operating conditions. This design is ideal for on-line LC-MS with chemical ionization and direct
desorption.
Third representation Given uncontrolled flow rate or varied solvent composition, another representation was designed such that a different heating source and control system would allow for partial vaporization. Two different heating methods were combined because one is capable of more rapid response time while the other is slower. This combination allows the third representation of vaporizer to handle fluctuations in flow rate coming of the LC column.
Fourth representation The fourth version of the thermospray vaporizer heats the capillary tube only by direct
DC/AC ohmic (Joule) heating. A thermocouple placed in thermal contact with the exit of the capillary is used to prevent the destructive thermal runaway caused by overheating. This representation was concluded to be the ideal design by the 1988 patent. ==Mass spectrometry applications==