Journalartikel

Time of flight secondary ion mass spectrometry of bone-Impact of sample preparation and measurement conditions


AutorenlisteHenss, A; Hild, A; Rohnke, M; Wenisch, S; Janek, J

Jahr der Veröffentlichung2016

Seiten02A302-

ZeitschriftBiointerphases

Bandnummer11

Heftnummer2

ISSN1934-8630

eISSN1559-4106

Open Access StatusGreen

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1116/1.4928211

VerlagAmerican Institute of Physics


Abstract
Time of flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS) enables the simultaneous detection of organic and inorganic ions and fragments with high mass and spatial resolution. Due to recent technical developments, ToF-SIMS has been increasingly applied in the life sciences where sample preparation plays an eminent role for the quality of the analytical results. This paper focusses on sample preparation of bone tissue and its impact on ToF-SIMS analysis. The analysis of bone is important for the understanding of bone diseases and the development of replacement materials and new drugs for the cure of diseased bone. The main purpose of this paper is to find out which preparation process is best suited for ToF-SIMS analysis of bone tissue in order to obtain reliable and reproducible analytical results. The influence of the embedding process on the different components of bone is evaluated using principal component analysis. It is shown that epoxy resin as well as methacrylate based plastics (Epon and Technovit) as embedding materials do not infiltrate the mineralized tissue and that cut sections are better suited for the ToF-SIMS analysis than ground sections. In case of ground samples, a resin layer is smeared over the sample surface due to the polishing step and overlap of peaks is found. Beside some signals of fatty acids in the negative ion mode, the analysis of native, not embedded samples does not provide any advantage. The influence of bismuth bombardment and O-2 flooding on the signal intensity of organic and inorganic fragments due to the variation of the ionization probability is additionally discussed. As C-60 sputtering has to be applied to remove the smeared resin layer, its effect especially on the organic fragments of the bone is analyzed and described herein. (C) 2015 American Vacuum Society.



Autoren/Herausgeber




Zitierstile

Harvard-ZitierstilHenss, A., Hild, A., Rohnke, M., Wenisch, S. and Janek, J. (2016) Time of flight secondary ion mass spectrometry of bone-Impact of sample preparation and measurement conditions, Biointerphases, 11(2), p. 02A302. https://doi.org/10.1116/1.4928211

APA-ZitierstilHenss, A., Hild, A., Rohnke, M., Wenisch, S., & Janek, J. (2016). Time of flight secondary ion mass spectrometry of bone-Impact of sample preparation and measurement conditions. Biointerphases. 11(2), 02A302. https://doi.org/10.1116/1.4928211


Zuletzt aktualisiert 2025-10-06 um 10:38