Aston 1922/Chapter 5: Difference between revisions

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===30.  Limitations  of  the  parabola  method===
<big><big>'''Chapter V - The Mass-Spectrograph'''</big></big>
The  parabola
method  of  analysis  of  positive  rays  described  in  Chapter III,
though  almost  ideal  for  a  general  survey  of  masses  and  velocities,
has  objections  as  a  method  of  precision,  many  rays  are  lost  by
colUsion  in  the  narrow  canal-ray  tube  ;  the  mean  pressure  in
which  must  be  at  least  half  that  in  the  discharge-bulb  ;  very
fine  tubes  silt  up  by  disintegration  under  bombardment ;  the
total  energy  available  for  photography  falls  off  as  the  fourth
power  of  the  diameter  of  the  canal-ray  tube.


The  first  two  objections  can  be  overcome,  as  will  be  described
{{Template:Aston 1922 Contents}}
below,  by  replacing  the  brass  or  copper  tube  by  fine  apertures
made  in  aluminium,  a  metal  which  appears  to  suffer  Httle
disintegration,  and  by  exhausting  the  space  between  these
apertures  to  the  highest  degree  by  means  of  a  subsidiary
charcoal  tube  or  pump.  The  faUing  off  in  intensity  of  the
parabolas  as  one  attempts  to  make  them  finer  is  a  very  serious
difficulty,  as  the  accuracy  and  resolving  power  depend  on  the
ratio  of  the  thickness  to  the  total  magnetic  deflexion  ;  and
if  we  increase  the  latter  the  electric  deflexion  must  be  increased
to  correspond  and  the  parabolas  are  drawn  out,  resulting  again
in  loss  of  mtensity.


Also  the  nature  of the  patch  thrown  on  the plate  by  the  use
==30. Limitations of the parabola method==
of  a long  circular  tube  will  clearly  be  the  same  as  that  caused
by  the  fight  from  an  evenly  illuminated  disc  passing  through  a
circular  aperture  of  the  same  diameter,  that  is  to  say  it  will
have  a  penumbra.  Similarly  the  parabolic  streak  produced
by  an  infinite  series  of  such  patches  will  not  be  particularly
suitable  for  accurate  measurements  as  it  has  no  definite  edges.


43
The parabola method of analysis of positive rays described in [[Aston_1922/Chapter_3|Chapter III]], though almost ideal for a general survey of masses and velocities, has objections as a method of precision, many rays are lost by collision in the narrow canal-ray tube; the mean pressure in which must be at least half that in the discharge-bulb; very fine tubes silt up by disintegration under bombardment; the total energy available for photography falls off as the fourth power of the diameter of the canal-ray tube.


The first two objections can be overcome, as will be described below, by replacing the brass or copper tube by fine apertures made in aluminium, a metal which appears to suffer little disintegration, and by exhausting the space between these apertures to the highest degree by means of a subsidiary charcoal tube or pump. The falling off in intensity of the parabolas as one attempts to make them finer is a very serious difficulty, as the accuracy and resolving power depend on the ratio of the thickness to the total magnetic deflexion; and if we increase the latter the electric deflexion must be increased to correspond and the parabolas are drawn out, resulting again in loss of intensity.


44  ISOTOPES
Also the nature of the patch thrown on the plate by the use of a long circular tube will clearly be the same as that caused by the fight from an evenly illuminated disc passing through a circular aperture of the same diameter, that is to say it will have a penumbra. Similarly the parabolic streak produced by an infinite series of such patches will not be particularly suitable for accurate measurements as it has no definite edges.


===31. Methods of increasing the intensity of the spot===  
==31. Methods of increasing the intensity of the spot==


The concentration of the stream of positive rays down the axis of
The concentration of the stream of positive rays down the axis of the discharge-bulb is very marked, but there is good evidence for assuming that the intense part of the stream occupies a considerable solid angle. This suggests the possibility of an increase of intensity by means of a device which should select the rays aimed at a particular spot on the plate, whatever direction they come from. For example, a thin gap between two coaxial equiangular cones would allow the rays to be concentrated at the vertex. The dimensions of the patch formed would be roughly those of one given by a cylindrical canal-ray tube of diameter equal to the width of the gap. The increase of intensity would therefore be considerable; but the method is not easy to put into practice, and, in the case of deflexions through large angles, would necessitate a curved photographic surface.
the discharge-bulb is very marked, but there is good evidence
for assuming that the intense part of the stream occupies
a considerable soUd  angle. This suggests the possibihty
of an increase of intensity by means of a device which
should select the rays aimed at a particular spot on the plate,
whatever direction they come from. For example, a thin gap
between two coaxial equiangular cones would allow the rays
to be concentrated at the vertex. The dimensions of the
patch formed would be roughly those of one given by a cylin-
drical canal-ray tube of diameter equal to the width of the gap.=


The  increase  of intensity would  therefore  be  considerable  ;
Clearly the simplest way of increasing the intensity of the spot without increasing its dimensions, at any rate in one direction, is to use two parallel straight slits. In the case of the parabola method this device would only be of use in a special case such as the resolution of a close double, as the parabolas will only be sharp at points where they are parallel to the slit.
but  the method  is not  easy  to put  into  practice,  and,  in  the
case of deflexions  through  large  angles,  would necessitate  a
curved  photographic  surface.


Clearly  the simplest  way  of increasing  the intensity  of  the
Such a slit system eliminates the difficulty of the penumbra mentioned above, at any rate so far as measurements at right angles to the line image are concerned.
spot  without  increasing  its  dimensions, at any rate in  one
direction,  is  to use  two  parallel  straight  slits. In  the  case  of=


the  parabola  method  this  device  would  only  be  of  use  in  a
==32. Possibilities of "focussing."==
special  case  such  as  the  resolution  of a  close  double,  as  the
parabolas  will  only  be  sharp  at  points  where  they  are  parallel
to  the  slit.


Such a slit  system  eliminates  the  difficulty  of the penumbra
Beams of charged particles which are homogeneous electrically (constant <math>m\frac{v^{^{2}}}{e}</math>) or magnetically (constant <math>\frac{v}{e}</math>) can be focussed like rays of light by special devices.<ref>Aston, Phil. Mag., 38, 709, 1919.[{{doi}}10.1080/14786441208636004]</ref> The method of Dempster, described in the [[Aston 1922/Chapter_3#22._Dempster's_method_of_positive_ray_analysis|previous Chapter]], makes use of a form of magnetic focussing. But the rays generated by the ordinary discharge bulb are heterogeneous both in <math>mv^{^{2}}</math> and <math>mv</math> so that what is required is an arrangement which will focus all rays of constant mass, even though their velocity may vary over an appreciable range.
mentioned  above,  at  any  rate  so  far  as  measurements  at  right
angles  to  the line  image  are concerned.


32. Possibilities  of "focussing."  Beams  of  charged
==33. Principle of the Mass-spectrograph==  
particles  which  are  homogeneous  electrically  (constant  mv'^/e)
or  magnetically  (constant  mv/e)  can  be  focussed  Uke  rays  of
light  by  special  devices.^  The  method  of  Dempster,  described
in  the previous  Chapter,  makes  use  of  a  form  of  magnetic
focussing.  But  the  rays  generated  by  the  ordinary  discharge
bulb  are  heterogeneous  both  in  mv^  and  mv  so  that  what  is
required  is  an  arrangement  which  will  focus  aU  rays  of  constant=


mass, even  though  their  velocity  may  vary  over  an  appreciable
This purpose is achieved by the arrangement illustrated diagrammatically in Fig. 8. The exact mathematical analysis has now been worked out by R. H. [[wikipedia:Ralph H. Fowler|Fowler]],<ref>Aston and Fowler, ''Phil. Mag''., 1922.[{{doi}}10.1080/14786442208633905]</ref> but it is proposed to give only the approximate theory here for the sake of simplicity.
range.


33. Principle  of the  Mass-spectrograph. This  purpose
[[File:Aston 1922 Figure 8.jpg|thumb|400 px|right|Fig. 8. Diagram of Mass-Spectograph.]]


1  Aston, Phil. Mag., 38,  709,     1919.
The rays after arriving at the cathode face pass through two very narrow parallel sUts of special construction Si S3, and the resulting thin ribbon is spread out into an electric spectrum by means of the parallel plates Pi, P2. After emerging from the electric field the rays may be taken, to a first order of approximation, as radiating from a virtual
source Z half way through the field on the line Si S2. A group of these rays is now selected by means of the diaphragm D, and allowed to pass between the parallel poles of a magnet. For simplicity the poles are taken as circular, the field between them uniform and of such sign as to bend the rays in the opposite direction to the foregoing electric field.


If &theta; and &phi; be the angles (taken algebraically) through which the selected beam of rays is bent by passing through fields of strength X and H, then


THE  MASS-SPECTROGRAPH
:<math>\theta v^2 = l\mathbf{X} \frac{e}{m}\;</math> (1)


and


45
:<math>\phi v = L\mathbf{H} \frac{e}{m}\;</math>  (2)


where ''l'', ''L'' are the lengths of the paths of the rays in the fields. Equation (1) is only true for small angles, but exact enough for practice. It follows that over the small range of d selected by the diaphragm ''&theta;v'' and ''&phi;v'' are constant for all rays of given ''e/m'', therefore


is  achieved  by  the  arrangement  illustrated  diagrammatically
::<math> \frac{\delta \theta}{\theta} + \frac{ \delta v}{v} = 0 \; </math> ,
in  Fig.  8.  The  exact  mathematical  analysis  has  now  been
worked  out by  R.  H.  Fowler,'-  but  it  is  proposed  to  give  only=


the  approximate  theory  here  for  the  sake  of  simpUcity.
and


The  rays  after  arriving  at  the  cathode  face  pass  through
:<math>\frac{\delta \phi}{\phi} + \frac{2 \delta v}{v} = 0 \; </math> ,
two  very  narrow  parallel  sUts  of  special  construction  Si  S3,
and  the  resulting  thin  ribbon  is  spread  out  into  an  electric
spectrum  by  means  of  the  parallel  plates  Pi,  P2.  After
emerging  from  the  electric  field  the  rays  may  be  taken,  to  a
first  order  of  approximation,    as  radiating  from  a  virtual=


so that


::<math> \frac{\delta \theta}{\theta} = \frac{2 \delta \phi}{\phi}  \; </math> ,


Si
when the velocity varies in a group of rays of given ''e/m''.


In order to illustrate in the simplest possible way how this relation may be used to obtain focussing, let us suppose the angles (exaggerated in the diagram) small and the magnetic field acting as if concentrated at the centre O of the pole pieces. If the breadth ZO = ''b'', the group selected will be spread out to a breadth ''b''&delta;&theta; at O, and at a further distance ''r'' the breadth will be


Fig.  8. Diagram of Mass-Spectograph.
::<math> b \delta \theta + r\left ( \delta \theta+\delta \phi \right ) \; </math> or <math>\delta \theta \left ( b +r\left ( 1+ \frac{\phi }{2\theta }\right ) \right ) \; </math> . . (3)


source  Z  half  way  through  the field  on  the  line  Si  S2. A  group=
Now as the electric and magnetic deflexions are in opposite
directions, &theta; is a negative angle. Say &theta; = -&theta;<sup>'</sup> . Then if
&phi; &gt; 2&theta;<sup>'</sup>, the quantity (3) will vanish at a value of ''r'' given by


of  these  rays  is  now  selected  by  means  of  the  diaphragm  D,
::<math> r\left ( \phi -2\theta ^\prime \right )= b \,. \, 2\theta ^\prime \; </math> ,
and  allowed  to  pass  between  the  parallel  poles  of  a  magnet.
For  simplicity  the  poles  are  taken as circular, the  field  between=


them  uniform  and  of  such  sign  as  to  bend  the  rays  in  the
This equation appears correct within practical limits for large
opposite  direction  to  the  foregoing  electric  field.
circular pole-pieces.


If  d  and  (p  be  the  angles  (taken  algebraically) through which
Referred to axes OX, OY the focus is at ''r cos (&phi;-2&theta;<sup>'</sup>)'', ''r sin (&phi;-2&theta;<sup>'</sup>)'' or ''r,b.2&theta;<sup>'</sup>''; so that to a first-order approximation, whatever the fields, so long as the position of the diaphragm is fixed, the foci will all lie on the straight line ZF drawn through Z parallel to OX. For purposes of construction G the image of Z in OY is a convenient reference point, &phi; being here equal to 4&theta;<sup>'</sup>. It is clear that a photographic plate, indicated by the thick line, will be in fair focus for values of ''e/m'' over a range large enough for accurate comparison of masses.
the selected  beam  of rays  is bent  by passing  through  fields
of strength  X  and  H,  then


Bv^  =3D  ZX  (1),    and    wv  =3D  LH  (2),
==34. Optical analogue==
m  m


Aston and  Fowler,  PM. Mag.,  1922.
[[File:Aston 1922 Plate 2.jpg|thumb|right|400 px|PLATE II.


Photograph of the Original Mass-Spectrograph set up in the Cavendish Laboratory in 1919.


46  ISOTOPES
<blockquote> B, Discharge Tube. A. Anode connected to high potential terminal of induction coil below table. C. Reservoir containing gas to be analysed. I<sub>1</sub>, I<sub>2</sub> Charcoal-liquid air tubes exhausting slit-system and camera. .S. Soft iron plates to shield discharge from stray magnetic field. L. Leads from high tension battery to electric plates. M Du Bois electromagnet. T, Pea lamp for photographing fiducial spot. V, Vacuum-tight and light-tight control for moving photographic plate. W. Camera showing light-tight cap on the left. H, Magnet circuit ammeter. O, Magnet circuit control resistances. G. Gaede rotating mercury pump connected to the camera and the discharge tube by glass tubes and stopcocks.</blockquote>]]


where  I,  L  are the lengths  of the paths  of the rays in  the fi=
It may be a help to form an understanding of the principle of the apparatus if we suppose that the beam is one of white light and the electric and magnet fields are glass prisms deflecting the light in opposite directions. The slit system acts as a collimator. If the glass of the first prism has a coefficient of dispersion double that of the second the heterogeneity of the rays of light will cause a spreading of the beam identical with that caused by heterogeneity (in respect to velocity) in the case of the positive rays. It will be clear that if we make the angle of refraction of the second prism more than double that of the first an achromatic image will appear at F.
elds.
Equation  (1) is  only  true  for  small  angles,  but  exact  enough
for  practice. It follows  that over  the small  range  of d  selected=


by the diaphragm  Bv  and q)V  are  constant  for  all  rays  of given=
Since it is a close analogue of the ordinary spectrograph and gives a "spectrum " depending upon mass alone the instrument is called a "[[mass-spectrograph]]" and the spectrum it produces a "[[mass-spectrum]]." It possesses one notable advantage over the optical spectrograph for, although we can never change the ratio of the dispersions, we can make the refractions whatever we will by the control of X and H, and so bring any desired range of the spectrum on to the plate.


e/m,  therefore
==35. The Discharge Tube.==


-^  +  =3D  0,    and    -^  +    =3D0,
Fig. 9 is a rough diagram of the arrangement of the mass-spectrograph when used for analysing positive rays generated by the ordinary discharge tube method. The discharge-tube B is an ordinary X-ray bulb 20 cm. in T
diameter. The anode A is of aluminium wire 3 mm. thick
surrounded concentrically by an insulated aluminium tube 7
mm. wide to protect the glass walls, as in the Lodge valve.


U  V  cp  V
[[File:Aston 1922 Figure 9.jpg|thumb|left|400 px|Fig. 9. Mass-Spectrograph.]]


so that 66  _  26(p
The aluminium cathode C, 2-5 cm. wide, is concave, about 8 cm. radius of curvature, and is placed just in the neck of the bulb this shape and position having been adopted after a short preliminary research.<ref>Aston, ''Proc. Camb. Phil. Soc'', '''19''', 317. 1919.[https://ia600205.us.archive.org/16/items/proceedingsofcam1920191721camb/proceedingsofcam1920191721camb_bw.pdf]</ref> In order to protect the opposite end of the bulb, which would be immediately melted by the very concentrated beam of cathode rays, a silica bulb D about 12 mm. diameter is mounted as indicated. The use of silica as an anticathode has the great advantage of cutting down the production of undesirable X-rays to a minimum. The cathode is earthed.


T  ~  'y
The discharge is maintained by means of a large induction coil actuated by a mercury coal-gas break; about 100 to 150 watts are passed through the primary, and the bulb is arranged to take from 0.5 to 1 milllampere at potentials ranging from 20,000 to 50,000 volts. Owing to the particular shape and position of the electrodes, especially those of the anode, the bulb acts perfectly as its own rectifier.


when  the velocity  varies  in a group  of rays  of given  e/m.
The method of mounting the cathode will be readily seen from Fig. 10, which shows part of the apparatus in greater detail. The neck of the bulb is ground off short and cemented with wax to the flat brass collar E, which forms the mouth of an annular space between a wide outer tube F and the inner tube carrying the cathode. The concentric position of the neck is assured by three small ears of brass not shown. The wax joint is kept cool by circulating water through the copper pipe shown in section at G.


In  order  to  illustrate  in  the  simplest  possible  way  how  this
[[File:Aston 1922 Figure 10.jpg|thumb|right|400 px|Fig 10. Mounting of Cathode of Mass-Spectrograph.]]
relation  may  be  used  to  obtain  focussing,  let  us  suppose  the
angles  (exaggerated  in  the  diagram)  small  and  the  magnetic
field  acting  as  if  concentrated  at  the  centre  0  of the  pole-
pieces. If  the  breadth  ZO  =3D  b,  the  group  selected  will  be
spread  out  to  a  breadth  b6d  at  0,  and  at  a  further  distance  r=


the  breadth  will  be
The gas to be analysed is admitted from the fine leak into the annular space and so to the discharge by means of the side-tube attached to F shown in dotted section at Q. Exhaustion is performed by a Gaede mercury-pump through a similar tube on the opposite side. The reason for this arrangement is that the space behind the cathode is the only part of the discharge bulb in which the gas is not raised to an extremely high potential. If the inlet or outlet is anywhere in front of
the cathode, falling special guards, the discharge is certain to strike to the pump or the gas reservoir. Such special guards have been made in the past by means of dummy cathodes in the bore of the tubes, but, notwithstanding the fact that the gas can only reach the bulb by diffusion, the present arrangement is far more satisfactory and has the additional advantage of enabling the bulb to be dismounted by breaking one joint only.


b6d  +  r[6d  +  6(p)  or  6e\b  +  r{l  +  ~)1  .       .       (3)
==36. The Slit System.==


Now  as the electric  and  magnetic  deflexions  are  in opposite
The very fine slits used in this apparatus were made with comparative ease as follows: A cylinder of pure aluminium about 10 mm. long by 5 mm. wide is carefully bored with a hole 1 mm. diameter. The resulting thick-walled tube is then cleaned and crushed with a hammer on an anvil until the circular hole becomes a slit about -3 mm. wide. Continuation of this treatment would result in a slit as fine as required giving the maximum resistance to the passage of gas, but its great depth would make the lining up of a pair a matter of extreme difficulty. The crushed tube is therefore now placed between two V-shaped pieces of steel and further crushed between the points of the V's at about its middle point until the required fineness is attained. Practice shows that the best way of doing this is to crush until the walls just touch, and then to open the sHt to the required width by judicious tapping at right angles to that previously employed. With a little care it is possible to make sHts with beautifully parallel sides to almost any degree of fineness, .01 mm. being easily attainable. At this stage the irregularly shaped piece of aluminium is not suited to accurate gas-tight fitting ; it is therefore filled with hard paraffin to protect it from small particles of metal, etc., which if entering cannot be dislodged owing to its shape, and turned up taper to fit the standard mountings. After turning, the paraffin is easily removed by heat and solvents. The centre of the cathode is pierced with a 3 mm. hole, the back of which is coned out to fit one of the standard slits Si. The back of the cathode is turned a gastight fit in the brass tube 2 cm. diameter carrying it, the other end of which bears the brass plug H which is also coned and fitted with the second slit Sa- The two slits, which are roughly .05 mm. wide by 2 mm. long, can be accurately adjusted parallel by means of their diffraction patterns. The space between the sUts, which are about 10 cm. apart, is kept exhausted to the highest degree by the charcoal tube Ii. By this arrangement it will be seen that not only is loss of rays by collision and neutralisation reduced to a minimum but any serious leak of gas from the bulb to the camera is eliminated altogether.
directions, is a negative  angle. Say  B  =3D    B' . Then=
  if
97&gt;20', the quantity  (3) will vanish  at  a value  of r  given  b=
y


r{(p    26')  =3D  b  . 26',
==37. The Electric Field==


This  equation  appears  correct  within  practical  limits  for  large
The spreading of the heterogeneous ribbon of rays formed by the slits into an electric spectrum takes place between two parallel flat brass surfaces, Ji, Ja, 5 cm. long, held 2-8 mm. apart by glass distance-pieces, the whole system being wedged immovably in the brass containing-tube in the position shown. The lower surface is cut from a solid cyUnder fitting the tube and connected to it and earth. The upper surface is a thick brass plate, which can be raised to the desired potential, 200-500 volts, by means of a set of small storage-cells. In order to have the plates as near together as possible, they are sloped at 1 in 20 &mdash; i.e. half the angle of slope of the mean ray of the part of the spectrum which is to be selected by the diaphragms. Of these there are two: one, K<sub>1</sub>, an oblong aperture in a clean brass plate, is fixed just in front of the second movable one, K<sub>2</sub>, which is mounted in the bore of a carefully ground stopcock L. The function of the first diaphragm is to prevent any possibility of charged rays striking the greasy surface of the plug of the stopcock when the latter is in any working position. The variable diaphragm is in effect two square apertures sliding past each other as the plug of the stopcock is turned, the fact that they are not in the same plane being irrelevant. When the stopcock is fully open as sketched in Fig. 10 the angle of rays passing is a maximum, and it may be stopped down to any desired extent by rotation of the plug, becoming zero before any greasy surface is exposed to the rays. Incidentally the stopcock serves another and very convenient use, which is to cut off the camera from the discharge tube, so that the latter need not be filled with air each time the former is opened to change the plate.
circular  pole-pieces.


Referred  to  axes  OX,  OY  the  focus  is  at  r  cos  ( (p  26'=
==38. The Magnetic Field==
),
r  sin  (9?    26'),  or  r,  b.26'  ;  so  that  to  a  first-ord=
er  approxima-
tion, whatever  the  fields,  so  long  as  the  position  of  the  diaphra=
gm
is  fixed,  the  foci  will  all  lie  on  the  straight  line  ZF  drawn=


through  Z  parallel  to  OX. For  purposes  of construction  G
After leaving the diaphragms the rays pass between the pole-pieces M of a large [[wikipedia:Emil du Bois-Reymond|Du Bois]] magnet of 2500 turns. The faces of these are circular, 8 cm. diameter, and held 3 mm. apart by brass distance-pieces. The cylindrical pole-pieces themselves are soldered into a brass tube O, which forms part of the camera N. When the latter is built into position, the pole-pieces are drawn by screwed bolts into the arms of the magnet, and so form a structure of great weight and rigidity and provide an admirable foundation for the whole apparatus. Current for the magnet is provided by a special set of large accumulators. With a potential of 300 volts on the electric plates the hydrogen lines are brought on to the scale at about 0.2 ampere, and an increase to 5 amperes, which gives practical saturation, only just brings the singly-charged mercury lines into view. The discharge is protected from the stray field of the magnet by the usual soft iron plates, not shown.
the image  of Z  in  OY  is a convenient  reference  point, (p  being=


here  equal  to  40'. It  is  clear  that  a  photographic  plate,  indi-=
==39. The Camera==


cated by  the thick  fine,  will  be  in  fair  focus  for  values  of  e/=
[[File:Aston 1922 Figure 11.jpg|thumb|right|400 px|Fig. 11. The Plateholder of the Camera.]]
m
over  a  range  large  enough  for  accurate  comparison  of  masses.


===34. Optical  analogue===
The main body of the camera N is made of stout brass tube 6-4 cm. diameter, shaped to fit on to the transverse tube 0 containing the pole-pieces. The construction of the plate-holder is indicated by the side view in Fig. 9 and an end-on view in Fig. 11. The rays after being magnetically deflected pass between two vertical earthed brass plates Z, Z about 3 mm. apart, and finally reach the photographic plate through a narrow slot 2 mm. wide, 11-8 cm. long, cut in the horizontal metal plate X, X. The three brass plates forming
It  may  be  a  help  to form  an
a T-shaped girder are adjusted and locked in position by a set of three leveling-screws, at each end ; the right-hand upper one is omitted in Fig. 11. The plates Z, Z serve to protect the rays completely from any stray electric field, even that caused by the photographic plate itself becoming
understanding  of the principle  of  the apparatus  if  we  suppose
charged until within a few millimetres of their point of impact.
that the beam  is  one  of white  light  and  the  electric  and  magnet=


PLATE    II.
The photographic plate W, which is a 2 cm. strip cut lengthwise from a 5 x 4 plate, is supported at its ends on two narrow transverse rails which raise it just clear of the plate X, X. Normally it lies to the right of the slot as indicated, and to make an exposure it is moved parallel to itself over the slot by means of a sort of double lazy-tongs carrying wire claws which bracket the ends of the plate as shown. This mechanism, which is not shown in detail is operated by means of a torque rod V working through a ground glass joint.  Y is a small willemite screen.


=3D- r
The adjustment of the plate-holder so that the sensitised surface should be at the best focal plane was done by taking a series of exposures of the bright hydrogen lines with different magnetic fields on a large plate placed in the empty camera at a small inclination to the vertical. On developing this, the actual track of the rays could be seen and the locus of points of maximum concentration determined. The final adjustment was made by trial and error and was exceedingly tedious, as air had to be admitted and a new plate inserted after each tentative small alteration of the leveling-screws.


Photograph    of  tlie    Original    Mass-Spectrograph    set    up  in =
==40. Experimental procedure==
  the   Cavendish
The plate having been dried in a high vacuum overnight, the whole apparatus is exhausted as completely as possible by the pump with the stopcock L open. Ii and I2 are then cut off from the pump by stopcocks and immersed in liquid air for an hour or so. The electric field, which may range from 200 to 500 volts, is then applied and a small current passed through the magnet sufficient to bring the bright hydrogen molecule spot on to the willemite screen Y, where it can be inspected through the plate-glass back of the cap P, In the meantime the leak, pump, and coil, have all been started to get the bulb into the desired state.
Laboratory  in   1919.


B, Dischargp  Tube.  A.  Anode  connected  to high  potential  terminal  =
When this has become steady, Jj is earthed to prevent any rays reaching the camera when the plate is moved over the slot to its first position, which is judged by inspection through P with a non-actinic lamp. The magnet current having been set to the particular value desired and the diaphragm adjusted, the coil is momentarily interrupted while Jj is raised to the
of  induction  coil  below
desired potential, after which the exposure starts. During this, preferably both at the beginning and the end, light from a lamp T is admitted for a few seconds down the tube R (Fig. 9) the ends of which are pierced with two tiny circular holes. The lower hole is very close to the plate, so that a circular dot or fiducial spot is formed from which the measurements of the lines may be made.
table.  C.  Reservoir  containing  gas  to be  analysed.  I,,  lo.  Charco=
al-liquid  air  tubes  exhausting
slit-system  and  camera.  .S'. Soft  iron  plates  to shield  discharge =
from  stray  magnetic  field.  L.
Leads  from  high  tension  battery  to electric  plates.  .1/.  ])u  lioi=
s  electromagnet.  T, Pea  lamp
for  i)hotographing  fiducial  spot. V, Vacuum-tight  and light-tight  c=
ontrol  for moving  photo-
graphic jilate.  W.  Camera  showing  light-tight  cap  on  the left.  H, =
Magnet  circuit  ammeter.
O,  Magnet  ( inuit  control  resistances. {;. Gaede  rotating  mercury  =
pump  connected  to the camera
and  the discharge  tube  by  glass  tubes  and  stopcocks.


The exposures may range from 20 seconds in the case of hydrogen lines to 30 minutes or more, 15 minutes being usually enough. As soon as it is complete the above procedure is repeated, and the plate moved into the second position. In this way as many as six spectra can be taken on one plate, after which L is shut, I2 warmed up, and air admitted to the camera. The cap P, which is on a ground joint, can now be removed, and the exposed plate seized and taken out with a special pair of forceps. A fresh plate is now immediately put in, P replaced and the camera again exhausted, in which state it is left till the next operation.


THE  MASS-SPECTROGRAPH
==41. Form of the Spectrum Lines==


[[File:Aston 1922 Figure 12.jpg|thumb|right|400 px|Fig. 12. Form of the Spectrum Lines.]]


47
Owing to the form of the slits used, the shape of the spot formed when undeflected rays from such a sht system strike a photograph surface normally, is somewhat as indicated at ''a'' (Fig. 12). When they strike the plate obliquely the image would be spread out in one direction, as in ''b''. This would be the actual form in the apparatus, if the deflexions of the mean and extreme rays (i.e., the rays forming the centre and the tips) were identical. This is true of the magnetic field since each cuts the same number of lines of force ; but it is not so in the case of the electric deflexion. Owing in part to the fact that the plates J<sub>1</sub>, J<sub>2</sub> are rectangular and in part to the stray field between the charged plate Ji and the earthed tube in which it is mounted, the extreme rays passing diagonally will be deflected more than the mean rays and the spot bent into the form shown at c. The convex side will be in the direction of the magnetic deflexion, as this is opposed to the deflexion causing the bend. The image on the plate will therefore be the part of this figure falling on the narrow slot in X, X; and as the apparatus is not exactly symmetrical, its shape in the spectra is the figure lying between the lines X, X in Fig. 12, ''c''.


==42. The distribution of the mass-spectrum over the photographic plate==


fields  are glass  prisms  deflecting  the light  in opposite  direction=
In order to study the positions of the focus F (Fig 8) on the plate corresponding to different values of the effective mass ''m'' when X and H are constant, we may assume perfect focussing and only consider a single median ray. If R is the radius of curvature of the path of a ray of effective mass ''m'' while in the magnetic field, and ''d'' the radius of the field, clearly tan &frac12;&phi; = ''d''/R. But X and &theta; are constant, hence ''mv''<sup>2</sup> must be constant so that the radius of curvature in the magnetic field varies as &radic;m. We may therefore write
s.
The  slit  system  acts  as  a  collimator.  If  the glass  of the first=


prism has a coefficient  of  dispersion  double  that  of  the  second=
::<math> tan\frac{1}{2}\phi =\sqrt{\frac{m_{0}}{m}} </math> . . . (4)


the  heterogeneity  of  the  rays  of  light  will  cause  a spreading
where m<sub>0</sub> is a constant and can be interpreted as that mass which under the conditions of the experiment is bent through a right angle in the magnetic field.
of  the  beam  identical  with  that caused  by  heterogeneity  (in
respect  to  velocity)  in  the case  of the positive  rays.  It  will  =
be
clear  that  if  we  make  the  angle of  refraction  of  the  second  pri=
sm
more  than  double  that  of  the first  an  achromatic  image  will
appear  at  F.


Since  it  is  a  close  analogue  of the  ordinary  spectrograph  and
Again if ON the length of the perpendicular dropped from the centre of the magnetic field upon ZF = P (a constant) then
gives  a  "  spectrum  "  depending  upon  mass  alone  the  instrument
is  called  a  "  mass-spectrograph  "  and  the  spectrum  it  produces
a  "  mass-spectrum."  It  possesses  one  notable  advantage
over  the optical  spectrograph  for,  although  we  can  never
change  the ratio  of the dispersions,  we  can  make  the  refractions=


whatever we  will  by  the  control  of  X  and  H,  and so bring  any=
::<math> NF = p \; cot\left ( \phi -2\theta \right ) </math> .  .  . (5)


desired  range  of the  spectrum  on  to the plate.
By combining (4) and (5) we get an expression for NF/''p'' in terms of ''m''<sub>0</sub> and ''m''. This is complicated,<ref>''Loc. cit.''</ref> but its differential can be shown to vanish when
tan &frac12;&phi; = tan 2&theta;
Thus the mass-scale is approximately linear near ;&phi; = 4&theta;


35.  The  Discharge  Tube.  Fig.  9  is  a  rough  diagram  of th=
This linear law was observed experimentally at the very outset and though at the time it was unexplained it added greatly to the ease and accuracy of the determinations of ''m''.
e
arrangement  of the  mass-spectrograph  when  used  for  analysing
positive  rays  generated  by  the  ordinary  discharge  tube  method.
The  discharge-tube  B  is  an  ordinary  X-ray  bulb  20  cm. in
T


The quantity actually measured is the distance between a fixed point on the photographic place called the "fiducial spot"<ref>V. p. 53.</ref> and the focussed image F. Let us call this distance D.  D and NF differ by a constant k &mdash; about 5.4 cm. in the
present apparatus &mdash; so that the relation between D and ''m'' has the form D = ''f'' = (''m''/''m''<sub>0</sub>) where ''f'' is a function in which all the coefficients ''p'', ''k'', and tan 2&theta; are geometrical constants, the fields only affect ''m''<sub>0</sub>. It follows directly that so long as the apparatus is rigid: If D<sub>1</sub> and D<sub>2</sub> are the distances from the fiducial spot of any two points on the plate and ''m''<sub>0</sub> and ''m'', the corresponding masses for given values of D<sub>1</sub> and D<sub>2</sub>, the ratio ''m''<sub>1</sub>/''m''<sub>2</sub> will be the same in every photograph.


Fig.  9.  Mass-Spectrograph.
==43. Practical method of deducing the effective mass of a particle from the position of its line on the photograph==


diameter.  The anode  A  is of aluminium  wire  3  mm.  thick
The mathematical investigation described above is of interest as it explains the results obtained, but the actual determination of masses from mass-spectra is a purely empirical process, and consists in the comparison of the positions of the Unes caused by the masses in question with the positions of known reference lines. The only assumption made was that given at the end of the previous paragraph and even this was capable of verification by experiment, using such methods as that described on p. 57, or even more fundamentally, in the special case of the ratio 2/1, by the known identity of the mass ratios O<sub>2</sub>/O, O/O<sup>++</sup>, and C/C<sup>++</sup>.
surrounded  concentrically  by an  insulated  aluminium  tube  7
mm. wide  to  protect  the glass  walls, as in the Lodge  valve.


The aluminium  cathode  C, 2-5  cm.  wide, is  concave, about
The reference fines used at the outset of the work were lines given by particles of elements and compounds the relative masses of which were known to at least the order of accuracy aimed for. The procedure was somewhat as follows. A series of spectra were taken with say a mixture of CO<sub>2</sub> and CH<sub>4</sub> in the discharge tube. Previous experience with the parabola method of analysis led to the expectation that lines at 6-C<sup>++</sup> , 8-O<sup>++</sup> +, 12-C, 16-O, 28-CO, 32-O<sub>2</sub>, 44-CO<sub>2</sub> would certainly be present, there would also be a series of hydrocarbon lines between 12 and 16, CH, CH<sub>2</sub>, CH<sub>3</sub> which could be regarded as known. A spectrum was selected containing as many as possible of these known lines and their masses ''m''<sub>1</sub>, ''m''<sub>2</sub>, ''m''<sub>3</sub> were plotted against the distances of the lines from the fixed fiducial spot and a curve drawn through the points so obtained. This is our first ''calibration curve'' of necessity inaccurate owing to the gaps between the points. A second spectrum was now taken in which the same fines appeared in a different place,
8  cm. radius  of curvature, and is placed  just  in the neck  of  t=
for by altering the magnetic field we can place them wherever we please, and the new set of distances from the fiducial spot measured. These distances were now transformed into masses (no longer integral) ''m''<sub>1</sub>', ''m''<sub>2</sub>', ''m''<sub>3</sub>', by means of the curve previously drawn. Supposing the curve to be accurate and the
he
ratio law to hold
bulb  this  shape  and  position  having  been  adopted  after  a=


short  preliminary  research.^     In  order  to  protect  the  opposite
::<math>\frac{m_{1}^{'}}{m_{1}}=\frac{m_{2}^{'}}{m_{2}}=\frac{m_{3}^{'}}{m_{3}}=r</math>


1  Aston, Proc. Camb.  Phil.  Soc,  19,  317.     1919.
where ''r'' is clearly a
measure of the change in ''m''<sub>0</sub> in the mathematical discussion above. In practice these ratios were found to be very nearly the same, so that a mean value of r could be taken with confidence. The known masses multiplied by that mean now gave a new set of points on the original curve. By carrying on this process all the serious gaps in the curve could be bridged and its accuracy brought up to the required standard.


The calibration curve so formed renders the identification of one fine sufficient to deduce the masses corresponding to all the other lines on the plate, and as in general many lines are known on each spectrum, its accuracy is continually subject to fresh test. In practice it was found perfectly reliable so long as none of the geometrical constants of the apparatus were altered.


48
Owing to the linear relation at &phi; = 2&theta; the actual curve was very nearly straight for a considerable portion of its length. This allowed the following alternative procedure to be adopted if desired. A linear relation was assumed and a table of corrections made by means of reference lines, and these corrections when subtracted from the observed displacements gave an exactly linear relation with mass. A correction-curve (apparently parabolic) was drawn, from which the appropriate correction for any displacement could be written down and the mass corresponding to this displacement obtained by simple proportion.


In connection with the use of reference lines it might be thought difficult to know which of the lines on a plate corresponds to a known mass, since they are not labelled in any way. A little consideration will show that the same difficulty is raised in the case of the standard lines of the iron arc and the stars in the sky, yet neither the spectroscopist nor the astronomer have the least difficulty in recognising enough for
their purpose, indeed a mistake in identity would lead in most cases to an error so gross as to compel immediate attention. This comparison is perhaps a little flattering to the lines on a mass-spectrum as these alter their relative intensity to some extent, but in particular cases, such as those of the hydrocarbons and mercury, identification is, after a little experience, as easy as that of the Pole Star or of the D lines in the spectrum of sodium.


ISOTOPES
==44. Comparison of masses by the method of "coincidence"==


The method of deducing the masses of particles from the position of their lines described in the foregoing paragraph is simple and straightforward. It also has the great advantage of not requiring an accurate knowledge of the numerical values of the electric and magnetic fields. The only requisite is that these should be constant during the exposure, and even if this constancy is not quite perfect the shift in position will affect all the lines known and unknown alike and therefore introduce no serious error into the results obtained. There is, however, another method of comparing masses which requires no knowledge, either theoretical or empirical, of the relation between effective mass and measured displacement. This is independent of the calibration curve and therefore constitutes a valuable check on results obtained by its use. It depends upon the following considerations: Suppose we wish to compare an unknown mass ''m''<sup>'</sup> with a known mass ''m''. A mass-spectrum is taken with fields X and H such that the mass ''m'' gives a fine at a certain position on the plate. The fields are now altered until the line caused by the unknown mass ''m''' is brought to the identical position on the plate previously occupied by the fine due to ''m''. The paths of the rays in the two cases must be identical, hence if X', H' are the new values of the fields it follows at once from equations (1) and (2)<ref>F. p. 45.</ref> that
::<math>\frac{m^{'}}{m}=\frac{X}{X^{'}}\times \left ( \frac{H^{''}}{H} \right )^{2}</math>.
Now it is only necessary to measure one of the fields if we keep the other constant and therefore H, which cannot be measured or reproduced accurately, is kept constant, and X is measured. For the latter purpose it is only necessary to measure the
potentials applied to the plates P<sub>1</sub>, P<sub>2</sub>, which can be done with the greatest ease and accuracy.


end  of the  bulb,  which  would  be immediately  melted  by the
Thus, to take a numerical illustration, the position occupied by the line due to carbon (12) with a potential on the plates of 320 volts should be exactly coincident with that occupied by the line due to Oxygen (16) with 240 volts when the magnetic field is kept constant. All such coincidences have so far been found to occur within the error of experiment, whatever the position on the plate.
very  concentrated  beam  of  cathode  rays,  a  silica  bulb  D  about
12  mm.  diameter  is mounted  as  indicated. The  use  of silica
as  an  anticathode  has  the great  advantage  of  cutting  down
the production  of  undesirable  X-rays  to  a  minimum.  The
cathode  is  earthed.


The discharge  is maintained  by  means  of a large  induction-
Methods depending on the measured variation of X with H constant have some practical disadvantages. The first and most obvious of these is that any small change in the value of the magnetic field between the two exposures will lead to a definite error, this error will be double the percentage change in the field, since the square of the latter is involved. The second objection is founded on considerations of intensity. If the parabola method of analysis is compared with the mass-spectrograph it will readily be observed that, in effect, the latter focusses at a point all the rays which in the former method form a short element of arc on a parabola. The length of the element of arc is determined by the angle of the electric spectrum allowed to pass, i.e. the width of the diaphragm. Its position on the parabola is at our disposal, for, referring to Fig. 4, p. 28, it wiU be seen that the higher we make X, that is to say the higher the energy of the beam of rays we select at constants, the nearer the element of arc will approach the axis OY, in fact its distance from that axis will simply be inversely proportional to X. Also, however many parabolas we consider and however much we move them about by changing H, so long as X is constant the elements of arc selected will all he on a line parallel to OY. Now it has already been pointed out<ref>P. 29.</ref> that the intensity of normal parabolas is a maximum near the head p, where the energy corresponds to the full fall of potential across the discharge tube, and fades away rapidly, in some cases very rapidly indeed, at points more distant from the origin. In order to get the greatest intensity at the focussed spot we must therefore choose X so that the element of arc selected will be near the head of the parabola. This is done in practice by observing visually, by means of a willemite screen, the very bright Une given by the hydrogen molecule while different potentials are apphed to the plates. The best value of X so determined must also be the best value for all the other normal lines, so that in the ordinary calibration curve method, when X is kept constant, it is possible to use conditions in which all the normal lines on the mass-spectra will be at their brightest together, whatever range we bring on to the plate by altering the magnetic field.
coil  actuated  by a  mercury  coal-gas  break  ;  about  100  to 150
watts  are  passed  through  the primary, and  the bulb  is arranged
to take  from 0-5  to 1  milUampere  at  potentials  ranging  from
20,000  to 50,000  volts. Owing  to the particular  shape  and
position  of the electrodes, especially  those  of the anode, the
bulb  acts  perfectly  as  its  own  rectifier.


The  method of mounting  the cathode  will be readily  seen
In the coincidence method this very fortunate circumstance
from Fig.   10, which  shows  part  of the apparatus  in  greater
cannot be taken advantage of, for with H constant the selected
elements of arc will now lie on a line parallel to OX. We
can only arrange matters for one, the lighter, of the two
masses to be compared, to be at its optimum. In the case
of the heavier the selected arc must he at a greater distance
from the origin and therefore provide a much feebler intensity.
The disparity in brightness, due to this effect will be the greater
the greater the ratio of the masses considered; it can be
corrected to some degree by softening the discharge tube
while the heavier mass is being photographed.


In spite of these drawbacks the principle underlying the
coincidence method is probably the most suitable for massratio measurements of the highest accuracy. The fact that
the paths of the rays is the same in the case of both masses
eliminates all errors due to non-uniformity of the fields and
the results are independent of any assumptions as regards
the ratios of the reference lines themselves. It is the only
method at present available in the case of elements far removed,
on the mass-scale, from the reference lines, and a modification
of it called the method of "[[bracketing]]" has been successfully
used to evaluate the masses of helium and hydrogen.<ref>V. p. 69.</ref>


Fig    10. Mounting  of Cathode  of  Mass-Spectrograph.
==45. The measurement of the lines==


The accurate
determination of the distance of the lines from the fiducial
spot is a physical problem of considerable interest. The
image itself is due to a caustic of rays, the edge of which will
be sharp on the side of maximum magnetic displacement, so
that this, the left side in the Plates, may be expected to maintain its sharpness when a large diaphragm is in use, while the
other will fade away gradually. Hence very bright lines will
be broadened to the right by this effect (which is analogous
to spherical astigmatism in ordinary lenses), but to the left
the only broadening will be that due to ordinary halation.
The relative importance of these two forms of spreading can
be gauged by taking photographs with a very small diaphragm,
for then the first will be eliminated and the second can be
estimated by comparing lines of different intensity. It is
found that for ordinary diaphragm apertures the halation
effect is much the smaller; it can also be minimised by using
lines of approximately equal intensity so that the most reliable
measurements of lines for position are obtained from their
left-hand edges. This is well illustrated in the " bracketed "
lines of hydrogen a and c, Plate III. In {a) measurements
of the left hand side of the three lines shows this bracket to
be really symmetrical though it does not appear so to the eye,
on account of the astigmatic spreading of the middle line
caused by the use of an open diaphragm and rather too long
an exposure. In (c) the diaphragm was almost closed and
the exposures more carefully adjusted, so that both sides of
the lines are sharp and their breadths practically identical.


detail. The neck  of the bulb  is  ground  off short  and cemented
The most accurate measurements were made on a comparator. The spectrum was set as closely as possible parallel to
with  wax  to the flat  brass  collar  E, which  forms  the mouth  of=
the axis of the instrument, and the distances between the
left-hand edge of the lines and the fiducial spot read off on a
Zeiss standard scale. For faint lines it was necessary to use
a very low power eyepiece of the reading microscope, and in
the case of the faintest lines of all, the best results could be
obtained by laying a millimetre scale on the plate and estimating the distance from the fiducial spot to the optical centre of
the lines, by the unaided eye.


an  annular  space  between  a  wide  outer  tube  F  and the  inner
==46. Resolving power and accuracy of mass determinstion==
tube  carrying  the  cathode.  The  concentric  position  of the
neck  is  assured  by  three  small  ears  of  brass  not  shown.  The
wax  joint  is  kept  cool  by  circulating  water  through  the  copper
pipe  shown  in  section  at  G.


The  gas  to  be  analysed  is  admitted  from  the fine  leak  into
Taking the width of the slits as 1/25 mm. and
the annular  space  and so  to  the discharge  by  means  of the
putting in the dimensions of the present apparatus the theory
side-tube  attached  to  F  shown  in dotted  section  at  QEx-
shows that in the region &phi; = 4&theta; lines differing by a little less
haustion is performed  by a  Gaede  mercury-pump  through  a
than 1 per cent, should be just separatedIn actual practice
similar  tube  on the opposite  side. The  reason  for  this  arrange-=
a better result was obtained, for the instrument is capable of
separating the lines of xenon, which differ by 1 in 130 ; this
is probably because the part of the line which falls on the strip
of plate exposed is due to the narrower edges of the slits.


ment is  that the space  behind  the  cathode  is the only part  of
The numerical relation between mass and position in this
the  discharge  bulb  in which  the  gas  is not  raised  to an  extreme=
part of the spectrum corresponds to a shift of 1.39 mm. for
ly
a change of mass of 1 per cent., so that even with the unaided
high  potential.    If  the  inlet  or  outlet  is anywhere  in front  o=
eye an accuracy of 1 part in 1,000 can be approached. Although
f
it is sufficient in theory to know the mass of one Hne only to
determine, with the calibration curve, the masses of all the
others, in practice every effort is made to bracket any unknown
line by reference lines and only to trust comparative measurements when the lines are fairly close together. Under these
conditions an accuracy of 1 in 1,000 is claimed and there is
httle doubt that in favourable cases it is exceeded.


==47. Order  of  results  and  nomenclature==


THE  MASS-SPECTROGRAPH  49
In the descriptions of the results obtained with the mass-spectrograph
contained in the following chapters the order of the elements
given is, when possible, that in which the experiments were
made. There is a practical reason for this procedure, as in
most cases it was impossible to eliminate any element used
before the following one was introduced. Evacuation and
washing have little effect, as the gases appear to get embedded
in the surface of the discharge bulb and are only released very
gradually by subsequent discharge.


the cathode,  faUing  special  guards,  the discharge  is  certain
The problem of nomenclature of the isotopes became serious
to strike  to the pump  or  the gas  reservoir. Such  special  guards=
when the very complex nature of the heavy elements was
apparent. It has been decided for the present to adopt the
rather clumsy but definite and elastic one of using the chemical
symbol of the complex element, with an index corresponding
to its mass : e.g. Ne<sup>22</sup> Rb<sup>87</sup> This system is made reasonable
by the fact that the constituents of complex elements have
all so far proved to have masses expressible in whole numbers.


have  been  made  in  the  past  by  means  of  dummy  cathodes  in
==48. Lines of the First, Second and higher Orders==
the  bore  of the  tubes,  but,  notwithstanding  the  fact  that  the
gas  can  only  reach  the bulb  by  diffusion, the  present  arrange-
ment is  far  more  satisfactory  and has  the  additional  advantage
of  enabling  the  bulb  to  be  dismounted  by  breaking  one  joint
only.


36.  The  Slit  System.  The  very  fine  slits  used  in  this  a=
It was shown on page 30 that particles having two charges
ppar-
gave a parabola corresponding to an effective mass of one
atus were  made  with  comparative  ease  as  follows :  A  cylind=
hah the normal mass. In the same way a particle with three
er  of
charges wiU have an effective mass of one third, and so on.
pure  aluminium  about  10  mm. long  by  5  mm.  wide  is  carefully
bored  with a  hole  1  mm.  diameter.  The  resulting  thick-walled
tube  is  then  cleaned  and crushed  with  a  hammer  on an  anvil  unti=
l
the  circular  hole  becomes  a  slit  about  -3  mm.  wide. Continuation=


of  this  treatment  would  result  in  a  slit  as  fine  as required  gi=
These apparent masses will duly make their appearance on
ving
mass-spectra as lines corresponding to simple fractions of the
the  maximum  resistance  to the  passage  of gas,  but  its  great
real mass causing them. It is convenient in these cases to
depth  would  make  the lining  up  of  a  pair  a  matter  of  extreme
borrow the nomenclature of optics and refer to the Unes given
difficulty. The  crushed  tube  is therefore  now  placed  between
by singly, doubly, and multiply charged particles respectively
two  V-shaped  pieces  of steel  and further  crushed  between
as Unes of the first, second, and higher orders. Thus the
the  points  of the V's  at  about  its  middle  point  until  the requi=
molecule of oxygen gives a first order fine at 32, and its atom
red
first and second order lines at 16 and 8.
fineness  is  attained.  Practice  shows  that  the  best  way  of
doing  this  is  to  crush  until  the  walls  just  touch,  and then  to=


open  the  sHt  to  the  required  width  by  judicious  tapping  at
The empirical rule that molecules only give first order lines<ref>J. J. Thomson, [[Rays of Positive Electricity]], p. 64.</ref>
right  angles  to  that previously  employed. With  a  little  care
is very useful in helping to differentiate between atoms and
it  is possible  to  make  sHts  with  beautifully  parallel  sides  to
compound molecules of the same apparent mass. Some
almost  any  degree  of fineness, -01  mm. being  easily  attainable.
results given below,<ref>V. p. 75.</ref> however, show that in certain cases it
At  this  stage  the  irregularly  shaped  piece  of  aluminium  is  not
breaks down, so that inferences made from it must not be taken
suited  to  accurate  gas-tight  fitting  ;  it  is  therefore  filled
as absolutely conclusive.
with  hard  paraffin  to  protect  it  from  small  particles  of  metal,=


etc.,  which  if  entering  cannot  be  dislodged  owing  to  its
==49. Negative mass-spectra==
shape,  and  turned  up  taper  to  fit  the  standard  mountings.
After  turning,  the  paraffin  is  easily  removed  by  heat  and
solvents.  The  centre  of  the  cathode  is  pierced  with  a  3  mm.
hole,  the  back  of  which  is  coned  out  to  fit  one  of  the  stan-=


dard slits Si. The  back  of the cathode  is turned  a gas-
It has been mentioned
tight  fit  in the brass  tube  2  cm. diameter  carrying  it, the
that positive rays could become negatively charged by the
other  end  of which  bears  the brass  plug  H  which  is  also  coned=
capture of electrons by collisions in the narrow canal-ray tube
of the Thomson apparatus, and so produce parabolas in the
quadrant opposite to that containing the normal ones. The
sHt system of the mass-spectrograph is specially designed to
eliminate such collisions as far as possible by exhausting the
space between the slits. If the means of exhaustion of this
space is deliberately cut off, and the normal electric and
magnetic fields both reversed in sign it is possible, at a small
cost in definition of the lines, to photograph the mass-spectra
of negatively charged particles. Such negatively charged
particles are only formed by elements or compounds having
marked electronegative properties. Very little work has been
done in this interesting field, but certain ambiguities in the
interpretation of the chlorine results have been satisfactorily
cleared up by its means.


and  fitted  with  the  second  slit  Sa-    The  two  sHts,  which  are=
==References==
 
<references/>
 
----
E
{{Template:Aston 1922 Contents}}
 
 
60  ISOTOPES
 
roughly  -05  mm.  wide  by  2  mm.  long,  can  be  accurately
adjusted  parallel  by  means  of  their  diffraction  patterns.  The
space  between  the  sUts,  which  are  about  10  cm.  apart,  is  kept
exhausted  to  the  highest  degree  by  the  charcoal  tube  Ii.
By  this  arrangement  it  will  be  seen  that  not  only  is  loss  of
rays  by  collision  and  neutraUsation  reduced  to  a  minimum
but  any  serious  leak  of  gas  from  the  bulb  to  the  camera  is
eliminated  altogether.
 
===37.  The  Electric  Field===
The  spreading  of  the  hetero-
geneous ribbon  of  rays  formed  by  the  slits  into  an  electric
spectrum  takes  place  between  two  parallel  flat  brass  surfaces,
Ji,  Ja,  5  cm.  long,  held  2-8  mm.  apart  by  glass  distance-pieces,
the  whole  system  being  wedged  immovably  in  the  brass  con-
taining-tube  in  the  position  shown.  The  lower  surface  is
cut  from  a  solid  cyUnder  fitting  the  tube  and  connected  to  it
and  earth.  The  upper  surface  is  a  thick  brass  plate,  which
can  be  raised  to  the  desired  potential,  200-500  volts,  by  means=
 
of  a  set  of  small  storage-cells.  In  order  to  have  the  plates
as  near  together  as  possible,  they  are  sloped  at  1  in  20 =E2=80=
=94 i.e.
half  the  angle  of  slope  of  the  mean  ray  of  the  part  of  the
spectrum  which  is  to  be  selected  by  the  diaphragms.  Of  these
there  are  two  :  one,  Kj,  an  oblong  aperture  in  a  clean  brass
plate,  is  fixed  just  in  front  of  the  second  movable  one,  Ka,
which  is  mounted  in  the  bore  of  a  carefully  ground  stopcock  L.=
 
The  function  of  the  first  diaphragm  is  to  prevent  any  possibility=
 
of  charged  rays  striking  the  greasy  surface  of  the  plug  of  the=
 
stopcock  when  the  latter  is  in  any  working  position.  The
variable  diaphragm  is  in  effect  two  square  apertures  shding
past  each  other  as  the  plug  of  the  stopcock  is  turned,  the  fact=
 
that  they  are  not  in  the  same  plane  being  irrelevant.  When
the  stopcock  is  fully  open  as  sketched  in  Fig.  10  the  angle  of=
 
rays  passing  is  a  maximum,  and  it  may  be  stopped  down  to
any  desired  extent  by  rotation  of  the  plug,  becoming  zero  before=
 
any  greasy  surface  is  exposed  to  the  rays.  Incidentally  the
stopcock  serves  another  and  very  convenient  use,  which  is  to
cut  off  the  camera  from  the  discharge  tube,  so  that  the  latter=
 
need  not  be  filled  with  air  each  time  the  former  is  opened  to=
 
change  the  plate.
 
 
THE  MASS-SPECTROGRAPH
 
 
61
 
 
===38.  The  Magnetic  Field===
After  leaving  the  diaphragms
the  rays  pass  between  the  pole-pieces  M  of  a  large  Du  Bois
magnet  of  2500  turns.  The  faces  of  these  are  circular,  8  cm.
diameter,  and  held  3  mm.  apart  by  brass  distance-pieces.
The  cylindrical  pole-pieces  themselves  are  soldered  into  a  brass
tube  0,  which  forms  part  of  the  camera  N.  When  the  latter  is
built  into  position,  the  pole-pieces  are  drawn  by  screwed
bolts  into  the  arms  of  the  magnet,  and  so  form  a  structure
of  great  weight  and  rigidity  and  provide  an  admirable  founda-
tion for  the  whole  apparatus.  Current  for  the  magnet  is
provided  by  a  special  set  of  large  accumulators.  With  a
potential  of  300  volts  on  the  electric  plates  the  hydrogen  lines=
 
are  brought  on  to  the  scale  at  about  0-2  ampere,  and  an  increas=
e
to  5  amperes,  which  gives  practical  saturation,  only  just  brings=
 
the  singly-charged  mercury  lines  into  view.  The  discharge
is  protected  from  the  stray  field  of  the  magnet  by  the  usual
soft  iron  plates,  not  shown.
 
 
===39.  The  Camera===
The  main  body  of  the  camera  N  is
made  of  stout  brass  tube  6-4  cm.  diameter,  shaped  to  fit  on  to
the  transverse  tube  0  containing
the  pole-pieces.  The  construc-
tion of  the  plate-holder  is  indi-
cated by  the  side  view  in  Fig.  9
and  an  end-on  view  in  Fig.  11.
The  rays  after  being  magnetically
deflected  pass  between  two  verti-
cal earthed  brass  plates  Z,  Z
about  3  mm.  apart,  and  finally
reach  the  photographic  plate
through  a  narrow  slot  2  mm.
wide,  11-8  cm.  long,  cut  in  the
horizontal  metal  plate  X,  X.
The    three  brass  plates  forming
 
a  T-shaped  girder  are  adjusted  and  locked  in  position  by  a
set  of  three  leveUing-screws,  at  each  end  ;  the  right-hand
upper  one  is  omitted  in  Fig.  11.  The  plates  Z,  Z  serve  to
protect  the  rays  completely  from  any  stray  electric  field,
even  that  caused  by  the  photographic  plate  itself  becoming
 
 
Fig.  11. The  Plateholder  of
the  Camera.
 
 
62  ISOTOPES
 
charged  until  within  a  few  millimetres  of  their  point  of
impact.
 
The  photographic  plate  W,  which  is  a  2  cm.  strip  cut  length-
wise from  a  5  X  4  plate,  is  supported  at  its  ends  on  two  narro=
w
transverse  rails  which  raise  it  just  clear  of  the  plate  X,  X.
Normally  it  lies  to  the  right  of  the  slot  as  indicated,  and  to =
make
an  exposure  it  is  moved  parallel  to  itself  over  the  slot  by  mea=
ns
of  a  sort  of  double  lazy-tongs  carrying  wire  claws  which  bracket=
 
the  ends  of  the  plate  as  shown.  This  mechanism,  which  is  not
shown  in  detail  is  operated  by  means  of  a  torque  rod  V  working=
 
through  a  ground  glass  joint.    Y  is  a  small  willemite  screen.=
 
 
The  adjustment  of  the  plate-holder  so  that  the  sensitised
surface  should  be  at  the  best  focal  plane  was  done  by  taking
a  series  of  exposures  of  the  bright  hydrogen  lines  with  different=
 
magnetic  fields  on  a  large  plate  placed  in  the  empty  camera
at  a  small  inclination  to  the  vertical.  On  developing  this,
the  actual  track  of  the  rays  could  be  seen  and  the  locus  of  po=
ints
of  maximum  concentration  determined.  The  final  adjustment
was  made  by  trial  and  error  and  was  exceedingly  tedious,  as
air  had  to  be  admitted  and  a  new  plate  inserted  after  each
tentative  small  alteration  of  the  leveUing-screws.
 
===40.  Experimental  procedure===
The  plate  having  been
dried  in  a  high  vacuum  overnight,  the  whole  apparatus  is
exhausted  as  completely  as  possible  by  the  pump  with  the
stopcock  L  open.  Ii  and  I2  are  then  cut  off  from  the  pump  by
stopcocks  and  immersed  in  hquid  air  for  an  hour  or  so.  The
electric  field,  which  may  range  from  200  to  500  volts,  is  then
applied  and  a  small  current  passed  through  the  magnet  sufficient
to  bring  the  bright  hydrogen  molecule  spot  on  to  the  willemite
screen  Y,  where  it  can  be  inspected  through  the  plate-glass
back  of  the  cap  P,  In  the  meantime  the  leak,  pump,  and  coil,
have  all  been  started  to  get  the  bulb  into  the  desired  state.
 
When  this  has  become  steady,  Jj  is  earthed  to  prevent  any
rays  reaching  the  camera  when  the  plate  is  moved  over  the  slot=
 
to  its  first  position,  which  is  judged  by  inspection  through  P
with  a  non-actinic  lamp.  The  magnet  current  having  been  set
to  the  particular  value  desired  and  the  diaphragm  adjusted,
the  coil  is  momentarily  interrupted  while  Jj  is  raised  to  the
 
 
THE  MASS-SPECTROGRAPH  53
 
desired  potential,  after  which  the  exposure  starts.  During  this,
preferably  both  at  the  beginning  and  the  end,  light  from  a  lamp=
 
T  is  admitted  for  a  few  seconds  down  the  tube  R  (Fig.  9)  the=
 
ends  of  which  are  pierced  with  two  tiny  circular  holes.  The
lower  hole  is  very  close  to  the  plate,  so  that  a  circular  dot  =
or
fiducial  spot  is  formed  from  which  the  measurements  of  the
lines  may  be  made.
 
The  exposures  may  range  from  20  seconds  in  the  case  of
hydrogen  lines  to  30  minutes  or  more,  15  minutes  being  usually
enough.  As  soon  as  it  is  complete  the  above  procedure  is
repeated,  and  the  plate  moved  into  the  second  position.  In  this=
 
way  as  many  as  six  spectra  can  be  taken  on  one  plate,  after
which  L  is  shut,  I2  warmed  up,  and  air  admitted  to  the  camera.=
 
The  cap  P,  which  is  on  a  ground  joint,  can  now  be  removed,
and  the  exposed  plate  seized  and  taken  out  with  a  special  pair=
 
of  forceps.  A  fresh  plate  is  now  immediately  put  in,  P  replaced=
 
and  the  camera  again  exhausted,  in  which  state  it  is  left  till=
 
the  next  operation.
 
===41.  Form  of  the  Spectrum  Lines===
Owing  to  the  form  of
the  slits  used,  the  shape  of  the  spot  formed  when  undeflected
rays  from  such  a  sht  system  strike  a  photograph  surface
normally,  is  somewhat  as  indicated  at  a  (Fig.  12).  When  they
strike  the  plate  obliquely  the  image  would  be  spread  out  in  one
direction,  as  in  b.    This  would  be  the  actual  form  in  the
 
a  b  c
 
A
 
 
Fia.  12.  Form  of  the  Spectrum  Lines.
 
apparatus,  if  the  deflexions  of  the  mean  and  extreme  rays  (i.e.,=
 
the  rays  forming  the  centre  and  the  tips)  were  identical.  This  is
true  of  the  magnetic  field  since  each  cuts  the  same  number
of  lines  of  force  ;  but  it  is  not  so  in  the  case  of  the  electric
deflexion.  Owing  in  part  to  the  fact  that  the  plates  Ji,  J2  are
rectangular  and  in  part  to  the  stray  field  between  the  charged
plate  Ji  and  the  earthed  tube  in  which  it  is  mounted,  the
 
54  ISOTOPES
 
extreme  rays  passing  diagonally  will  be  deflected  more  than
the  mean  rays  and  the  spot  bent  into  the  form  shown  at  c.
The  convex  side  will  be  in  the  direction  of  the  magnetic  de-
flexion, as  this  is  opposed  to  the  deflexion  causing  the  bend.
The  image  on  the  plate  will  therefore  be  the  part  of  this  figur=
e
falling  on  the  narrow  slot  in  X,  X  ;  and  as  the  apparatus  is  =
not
exactly  symmetrical,  its  shape  in  the  spectra  is  the  figure  lying=
 
between  the  lines  X,  X  in  Fig.  12,  c.
 
===42.  The  distribution  of  the  mass -spectrum  over  the photographic  plate===
In  order  to  study  the  positions  of  th=
e
focus  F  (Fig  8)  on  the  plate  corresponding  to  different  values
of  the  effective  mass  m  when  X  and  H  are  constant,  we  may
assume  perfect  focussing  and  only  consider  a  single  median
ray.  If  R  is  the  radius  of  curvature  of  the  path  of  a  ray  of=
 
effective  mass  m  while  in  the  magnetic  field,  and  d  the  radius=
 
of  the  field,  clearly  tan  ^  9?  =3D  c//R.  But  X  and  B  are  cons=
tant,
hence  mv"^  must  be  constant  so  that  the  radius  of  curvature
in  the  magnetic  field  varies  as  ^/m.  We  may  therefore  write
tan  I  (p  =3D  \/{mo/m)      .  .        (4)
 
where  Wg  is  a  constant  and  can  be  interpreted  as  that  mass
which  under  the  conditions  of  the  experiment  is  bent  through
a  right  angle  in  the  magnetic  field.
 
Again  if  ON  the  length  of  the  perpendicular  dropped  from
the  centre  of  the  magnetic  field  upon  ZF  =3D  i?  (a  constant)
then
 
NF  =3D  :p  cot  {(p    2d).        .        .      (5)
 
By  combining  (4)  and  (5)  we  get  an  expression  for  'NF/p  in
terms  of  Mq  and  m.  This  is  complicated, ^  but  its  differential
can  be  shown  to  vanish  when  tan  |  9?  =3D  tan  2d.  Thus  the
mass-scale  is  approximately  Hnear  near  9?  =3D  40.
 
This  linear  law  was  observed  experimentally  at  the  very
outset  and  though  at  the  time  it  was  unexplained  it  added
greatly  to  the  ease  and  accuracy  of  the  determinations  of  m.
 
The  quantity  actually  measured  is  the  distance  between  a
fixed  point  on  the  photographic  place  called  the  ' '  fiducial
spot  "  2  and  the  focussed  image  F.  Let  us  call  this  distance
D.    D  and  NF  differ  by  a  constant  k  about  5-4  cm.  in=
  the
 
1  Loc.  cit.    V.  p.  53.
 
 
THE  MASS-SPECTROGRAPH  55
 
present  apparatus  ^so  that  the  relation  between  D  and  m  =
has
the  form  D  =3D  /  (m/mo)  where  /  is  a  function  in  which  all  th=
e
coefficients  p,  k,  and  tan  26  are  geometrical  constants,  the
fields  only  affect  ttIq.  It  follows  directly  that  so  long  as  the=
 
apparatus  is  rigid  : If  Di  and  D  2  are  the  distances  f=
rom  the
fiducial  spot  of  any  two  points  on  the  plate  and  mi  and  m,
the  corresponding  masses  for  given  values  of  Di  and  Dg,  the
ratio  mi/ma  will  be  the  same  in  every  photograph.
 
===43.  Practical  method  of  deducing  the  effective  mass  of a  particle  from  the  position  of  its  line  on  the  photograph===
The  mathematical  investigation  described  above  is  of  inter=
est
as  it  explains  the  results  obtained,  but  the  actual  determination=
 
of  masses  from  mass-spectra  is  a  purely  empirical  process,  and
consists  in  the  comparison  of  the  positions  of  the  Unes  caused
by  the  masses  in  question  with  the  positions  of  known  reference=
 
lines.  The  only  assumption  made  was  that  given  at  the  end
of  the  previous  paragraph  and  even  this  was  capable  of  verifica-=
 
tion by  experiment,  using  such  methods  as  that  described  on
p.  57,  or  even  more  fundamentally,  in  the  special  case  of  the
ratio  2/1,  by  the  known  identity  of  the  mass  ratios  Og/O,
0/0+ +  ,  and  C/C+^
 
The  reference  fines  used  at  the  outset  of  the  work  were
lines  given  by  particles  of  elements  and  compounds  the  relative
masses  of  which  were  known  to  at  least  the  order  of  accuracy
aimed  for.  The  procedure  was  somewhat  as  follows.  A  series
of  spectra  were  taken  with  say  a  mixture  of  CO  2  and  CH4
in  the  discharge  tube.  Previous  experience  with  the  parabola
method  of  analysis  led  to  the  expectation  that  lines  at  6-C  +  +=
,
8-0+ +,  12-C,  16-0,  28-CO,  32-O2,  44-CO2  would  certainly  be
present,  there  would  also  be  a  series  of  hydrocarbon  lines
between  12  and  16,  CH,  CH2,  CH3  which  could  be  regarded  as
known.  A  spectrum  was  selected  containing  as  many  as
possible  of  these  known  lines  and  their  masses  mi,  m^,  m^, =E2=80=
=94
were  plotted  against  the  distances  of  the  lines  from  the  fixed
fiducial  spot  and  a  curve  drawn  through  the  points  so  obtained.=
 
This  is  our  first  calibration  curve  of  necessity  inaccurat=
e  owing
to  the  gaps  between  the  points.  A  second  spectrum  was  now
taken  in  which  the  same  fines  appeared  in  a  different  place,
 
 
56  ISOTOPES
 
for  by  altering  the  magnetic  field  we  can  place  them  wherever
we  please,  and  the  new  set  of  distances  from  the  fiducial  spot=
 
measured.  These  distances  were  now  transformed  into  masses
(no  longer  integral)  m'i,m'2,  m'3,  by  means  of  the  curve =
pre-
viously drawn.    Supposing  the  curve  to  be  accurate  and  the
 
fyv)  /yyi  /lyi
 
ratio  law  to  hold    -  =3D  ?  =3D  -  =3D=
  r  where  r  is  clearlv  a
 
measure  of  the  change  in  Wq  in  the  mathematical  discussion
above.  In  practice  these  ratios  were  found  to  be  very  nearly
the  same,  so  that  a  mean  value  of  r  could  be  taken  with
confidence.  The  known  masses  multiplied  by  that  mean  now
gave  a  new  set  of  points  on  the  original  curve.  By  carrying
on  this  process  all  the  serious  gaps  in  the  curve  could  be
bridged  and  its  accuracy  brought  up  to  the  required  standard.
 
The  calibration  curve  so  formed  renders  the  identification  of
one  fine  sufficient  to  deduce  the  masses  corresponding  to  all
the  other  lines  on  the  plate,  and  as  in  general  many  lines  are=
 
known  on  each  spectrum,  its  accuracy  is  continually  subject
to  fresh  test.  In  practice  it  was  found  perfectly  reliable  so
long  as  none  of  the  geometrical  constants  of  the  apparatus
were  altered.
 
Owing  to  the  linear  relation  at  9?  =3D  40  the  actual  curve  was=
 
very  nearly  straight  for  a  considerable  portion  of  its  length.
This  allowed  the  following  alternative  procedure  to  be  adopted
if  desired.  A  linear  relation  was  assumed  and  a  table  of
corrections  made  by  means  of  reference  lines,  and  these  correc-
tions when  subtracted  from  the  observed  displacements  gave
an  exactly  linear  relation  with  mass.  A  correction-curve
(apparently  paraboHc)  was  drawn,  from  which  the  appropriate
correction  for  any  displacement  could  be  written  down  and
the  mass  corresponding  to  this  displacement  obtained  by
simple  proportion.
 
In  connection  with  the  use  of  reference  lines  it  might  be
thought  difficult  to  know  which  of  the  lines  on  a  plate  corre-=
 
sponds to  a  known  mass,  since  they  are  not  labelled  in  any
way.  A  little  consideration  will  show  that  the  same  difficulty
is  raised  in  the  case  of  the  standard  lines  of  the  iron  arc  an=
d
the  stars  in  the  sky,  yet  neither  the  spectroscopist  nor  the
astronomer  have  the  least  difficulty  in  recognising  enough  for
 
 
THE  MASS-SPECTROGRAPH  57
 
their  purpose,  indeed  a  mistake  in  identity  would  lead  in
most  cases  to  an  error  so  gross  as  to  compel  immediate  atten-
tion. This  comparison  is  perhaps  a  Uttle  flattering  to  the
lines  on  a  mass-spectrum  as  these  alter  their  relative  intensity=
 
to  some  extent,  but  in  particular  cases,  such  as  those  of  the
hydrocarbons  and  mercury,  identification  is,  after  a  little
experience,  as  easy  as  that  of  the  Pole  Star  or  of  the  D  lines=
  in
the  spectrum  of  sodium.
 
===44.  Comparison  of  masses  by  the  method  of  "coincidence"===
The  method  of  deducing  the  masses  of  particles
from  the  position  of  their  lines  described  in  the  foregoing
paragraph  is  simple  and  straightforward.  It  also  has  the
great  advantage  of  not  requiring  an  accurate  knowledge  of
the  numerical  values  of  the  electric  and  magnetic  fields.  The
only  requisite  is  that  these  should  be  constant  during  the
exposure,  and  even  if  this  constancy  is  not  quite  perfect  the
shift  in  position  wiU  affect  all  the  lines  known  and  unknown
alike  and  therefore  introduce  no  serious  error  into  the  results
obtained.  There  is,  however,  another  method  of  comparing
masses  which  requires  no  knowledge,  either  theoretical  or
empirical,  of  the  relation  between  effective  mass  and  measured
displacement.  This  is  independent  of  the  calibration  curve
and  therefore  constitutes  a  valuable  check  on  results  obtained
by  its  use.  It  depends  upon  the  following  considerations  : =E2=80=
=94
Suppose  we  wish  to  compare  an  unknown  mass  m'  with  a
known  mass  m.  A  mass-spectrum  is  taken  with  fields  X  and
H  such  that  the  mass  m  gives  a  fine  at  a  certain  position  on=
 
the  plate.  The  fields  are  now  altered  until  the  line  caused
by  the  unknown  mass  m!  is  brought  to  the  identical  position
on  the  plate  previously  occupied  by  the  fine  due  to  m.  The
paths  of  the  rays  in  the  two  cases  must  be  identical,  hence  if=
 
X',  H'  are  the  new  values  of  the  fields  it  foUows  at  once  from=
 
equations  (1)  and  (2)  i  that  m' /m  =3D  X/X'  x  (HVH)^.  Now
it  is  only  necessary  to  measure  one  of  the  fields  if  we  keep  t=
he
other  constant  and  therefore  H,  which  cannot  be  measured  or
reproduced  accurately,  is  kept  constant,  and  X  is  measured.
For  the  latter  purpose  it  is  only  necessary  to  measure  the
 
1  F.  p.  45.
 
 
58  ISOTOPES
 
potentials  applied  to  the  plates  Pi,  Pa,  which  can  be  done  with=
 
the  greatest  ease  and  accuracy.
 
Thus,  to  take  a  numerical  illustration,  the  position  occupied
by  the  line  due  to  carbon  (12)  with  a  potential  on  the  plates=
 
of  320  volts  should  be  exactly  coincident  with  that  occupied
by  the  line  due  to  Oxygen  (16)  with  240  volts  when  the  mag-
netic field  is  kept  constant.  All  such  coincidences  have  so
far  been  found  to  occur  within  the  error  of  experiment,  what-
ever the  position  on  the  plate.
 
Methods  depending  on  the  measured  variation  of  X  with  H
constant  have  some  practical  disadvantages.  The  first  and
most  obvious  of  these  is  that  any  small  change  in  the  value
of  the  magnetic  field  between  the  two  exposures  will  lead  to
a  definite  error,  this  error  will  be  double  the  percentage  change=
 
in  the  field,  since  the  square  of  the  latter  is  involved.  The
second  objection  is  founded  on  considerations  of  intensity.
If  the  parabola  method  of  analysis  is  compared  with  the
mass-spectrograph  it  will  readily  be  observed  that,  in  effect,
the  latter  focusses  at  a  point  all  the  rays  which  in  the  former=
 
method  form  a  short  element  of  arc  on  a  parabola.  The
length  of  the  element  of  arc  is  determined  by  the  angle  of
the  electric  spectrum  allowed  to  pass,  i.e.  the  width  of  the
diaphragm.  Its  position  on  the  parabola  is  at  our  disposal,
for,  referring  to  Fig.  4,  p.  28,  it  wiU  be  seen  that  the  highe=
r  we
make  X,  that  is  to  say  the  higher  the  energy  of  the  beam  of
rays  we  select  at  constants,  the  nearer  the  element  of  arc  will=
 
approach  the  axis  OY,  in  fact  its  distance  from  that  axis  will=
 
simply  be  inversely  proportional  to  X.  Also,  however  many
parabolas  we  consider  and  however  much  we  move  them  about
by  changing  H,  so  long  as  X  is  constant  the  elements  of  arc
selected  will  all  he  on  a  line  parallel  to  OY.  Now  it  has
already  been  pointed  out  ^  that  the  intensity  of  normal  para-
bolas is  a  maximum  near  the  head  p,  where  the  energy  corre-
sponds to  the  full  fall  of  potential  across  the  discharge  tube,
and  fades  away  rapidly,  in  some  cases  very  rapidly  indeed,
at  points  more  distant  from  the  origin.  In  order  to  get  the
greatest  intensity  at  the  focussed  spot  we  must  therefore
choose  X  so  that  the  element  of  arc  selected  will  be  near  the=
 
 
1  P.  29.
 
 
THE  MASS-SPECTROGRAPH  59
 
head  of  the  parabola.  This  is  done  in  practice  by  observing
visually,  by  means  of  a  willemite  screen,  the  very  bright  Une
given  by  the  hydrogen  molecule  while  different  potentials  are
apphed  to  the  plates.  The  best  value  of  X  so  determined
must  also  be  the  best  value  for  all  the  other  normal  hnes,  so=
 
that  in  the  ordinary  calibration  curve  method,  when  X  is  kept
constant,  it  is  possible  to  use  conditions  in  which  all  the  norm=
al
Hnes  on  the  mass-spectra  will  be  at  their  brightest  together,
whatever  range  we  bring  on  to  the  plate  by  altering  the
magnetic  field.
 
In  the  coincidence  method  this  very  fortunate  circumstance
cannot  be  taken  advantage  of,  for  with  H  constant  the  selected
elements  of  arc  will  now  lie  on  a  line  parallel  to  OX.  We
can  only  arrange  matters  for  one,  the  Hghter,  of  the  two
masses  to  be  compared,  to  be  at  its  optimum.  In  the  case
of  the  heavier  the  selected  arc  must  he  at  a  greater  distance
from  the  origin  and  therefore  provide  a  much  feebler  intensity.
The  disparity  in  brightness,  due  to  this  effect  will  be  the  grea=
ter
the  greater  the  ratio  of  the  masses  considered  ;  it  can  be
corrected  to  some  degree  by  softening  the  discharge  tube
while  the  heavier  mass  is  being  photographed.
 
In  spite  of  these  drawbacks  the  principle  underlying  the
coincidence  method  is  probably  the  most  suitable  for  mass-
ratio  measurements  of  the  highest  accuracy.  The  fact  that
the  paths  of  the  rays  is  the  same  in  the  case  of  both  masses=
 
eliminates  all  errors  due  to  non-uniformity  of  the  fields  and
the  results  are  independent  of  any  assumptions  as  regards
the  ratios  of  the  reference  hnes  themselves.  It  is  the  only
method  at  present  available  in  the  case  of  elements  far  removed,=
 
on  the  mass-scale,  from  the  reference  Hnes,  and  a  modification
of  it  caUed  the  method  of  "  bracketing  "  has  been  successfuUy
used  to  evaluate  the  masses  of  helium  and  hydrogen.^
 
===45.  The  measurement  of  the  lines===
The  accurate
determination  of  the  distance  of  the  lines  from  the  fiducial
spot  is  a  physical  problem  of  considerable  interest.  The
image  itself  is  due  to  a  caustic  of  rays,  the  edge  of  which  wi=
ll
be  sharp  on  the  side  of  maximum  magnetic  displacement,  so
 
^  V.  p.  69.
 
 
60  ISOTOPES
 
that  this,  the  left  side  in  the  Plates,  may  be  expected  to  main=
-
tain its  sharpness  when  a  large  diaphragm  is  in  use,  while  the
other  wiU  fade  away  gradually.  Hence  very  bright  lines  will
be  broadened  to  the  right  by  this  effect  (which  is  analogous
to  spherical  astigmatism  in  ordinary  lenses),  but  to  the  left
the  only  broadening  will  be  that  due  to  ordinary  halation.
The  relative  importance  of  these  two  forms  of  spreading  can
be  gauged  by  taking  photographs  with  a  very  small  diaphragm,
for  then  the  first  will  be  ehminated  and  the  second  can  be
estimated  by  comparing  lines  of  different  intensity.  It  is
found  that  for  ordinary  diaphragm  apertures  the  halation
effect  is  much  the  smaller  ;  it  can  also  be  minimised  by  using=
 
lines  of  approximately  equal  intensity  so  that  the  most  reliable=
 
measurements  of  Hnes  for  position  are  obtained  from  their
left-hand  edges.  This  is  well  illustrated  in  the  "  bracketed  "
lines  of  hydrogen  a  and  c,  Plate  III.  In  {a)  measurements
of  the  left  hand  side  of  the  three  lines  shows  this  bracket  to=
 
be  really  symmetrical  though  it  does  not  appear  so  to  the  eye,=
 
on  account  of  the  astigmatic  spreading  of  the  middle  line
caused  by  the  use  of  an  open  diaphragm  and  rather  too  long
an  exposure.  In  (c)  the  diaphragm  was  almost  closed  and
the  exposures  more  carefully  adjusted,  so  that  both  sides  of
the  hnes  are  sharp  and  their  breadths  practically  identical.
 
The  most  accurate  measurements  were  made  on  a  compara-
tor. The  spectrum  was  set  as  closely  as  possible  parallel  to
the  axis  of  the  instrument,  and  the  distances  between  the
left-hand  edge  of  the  hnes  and  the  fiducial  spot  read  off  on  a=
 
Zeiss  standard  scale.  For  faint  hnes  it  was  necessary  to  use
a  very  low  power  eyepiece  of  the  reading  microscope,  and  in
the  case  of  the  faintest  lines  of  all,  the  best  results  could  b=
e
obtained  by  laying  a  miUimetre  scale  on  the  plate  and  estimat-
ing the  distance  from  the  fiducial  spot  to  the  optical  centre  of=
 
the  lines,  by  the  unaided  eye.
 
===46.  Resolving  power  and  accuracy  of  mass  determinstion===
Taking  the  width  of  the  slits  as  1/25  mm.  and
putting  in  the  dimensions  of  the  present  apparatus  the  theory
shows  that  in  the  region  9?  =3D  40  hnes  differing  by  a  httle  l=
ess
than  1  per  cent,  should  be  just  separated.    In  actual  practice
 
THE  MASS-SPECTROGRAPH  61
 
a  better  result  was  obtained,  for  the  instrument  is  capable  of
separating  the  Unes  of  xenon,  which  differ  by  1  in  130  ;  this=
 
is  probably  because  the  part  of  the  hne  which  faUs  on  the  strip=
 
of  plate  exposed  is  due  to  the  narrower  edges  of  the  shts.
 
The  numerical  relation  between  mass  and  position  in  this
part  of  the  spectrum  corresponds  to  a  shift  of  1-39  mm.  for
a  change  of  mass  of  1  per  cent.,  so  that  even  with  the  unaided=
 
eye  an  accuracy  of  1  part  in  1,000  can  be  approached.  Although=
 
it  is  sufficient  in  theory  to  know  the  mass  of  one  Hne  only  to=
 
determine,  with  the  cahbration  curve,  the  masses  of  aU  the
others,  in  practice  every  effort  is  made  to  bracket  any  unknown=
 
hne  by  reference  Unes  and  only  to  trust  comparative  measure-
ments when  the  Hnes  are  fairly  close  together.  Under  these
conditions  an  accuracy  of  1  in  1,000  is  claimed  and  there  is
httle  doubt  that  in  favourable  cases  it  is  exceeded.
 
===47.  Order    of    results    and    nomenclature===
In    the descriptions  of  the  results  obtained  with  the  mass-spectrograph
contained  in  the  following  chapters  the  order  of  the  elements
given  is,  when  possible,  that  in  which  the  experiments  were
made.  There  is  a  practical  reason  for  this  procedure,  as  in
most  cases  it  was  impossible  to  ehminate  any  element  used
before  the  following  one  was  introduced.  Evacuation  and
washing  have  httle  effect,  as  the  gases  appear  to  get  embedded
in  the  surface  of  the  discharge  bulb  and  are  only  released  very
gradually  by  subsequent  discharge.
 
The  problem  of  nomenclature  of  the  isotopes  became  serious
when  the  very  complex  nature  of  the  heavy  elements  was
apparent.  It  has  been  decided  for  the  present  to  adopt  the
rather  clumsy  but  definite  and  elastic  one  of  using  the  chemical
symbol  of  the  complex  element,  with  an  index  corresponding
to  its  mass  :  e.g.  Ne^^^  Rb8^  This  system  is  made  reasonable
by  the  fact  that  the  constituents  of  complex  elements  have
all  so  far  proved  to  have  masses  expressible  in  whole  nimabers.=
 
 
===48.  Lines  of  the  First,  Second  and  higher  Orders===
It  was  shown  on  page  30  that  particles  having  two  charges
gave  a  parabola  corresponding  to  an  effective  mass  of  one
hah  the  normal  mass.  In  the  same  way  a  particle  with  three
charges  wiU  have  an  effective  mass  of  one  third,  and  so  on.
 
 
62  ISOTOPES
 
These  apparent  masses  will  duly  make  their  appearance  on
mass-spectra  as  lines  corresponding  to  simple  fractions  of  the
real  mass  causing  them.  It  is  convenient  in  these  cases  to
borrow  the  nomenclature  of  optics  and  refer  to  the  Unes  given
by  singly,  doubly,  and  multiply  charged  particles  respectively
as  Unes  of  the  first,  second,  and  higher  orders.  Thus  the
molecule  of  oxygen  gives  a  first  order  fine  at  32,  and  its  atom=
 
first  and  second  order  lines  at  16  and  8.
 
The  empirical  rule  that  molecules  only  give  first  order  lines  ^=
 
is  very  useful  in  helping  to  differentiate  between  atoms  and
compound  molecules  of  the  same  apparent  mass.  Some
results  given  below, ^  however,  show  that  in  certain  cases  it
breaks  down,  so  that  inferences  made  from  it  must  not  be  taken=
 
as  absolutely  conclusive.
 
===49.  Negative  mass -spectra===
It  has  been  mentioned
that  positive  rays  could  become  negatively  charged  by  the
capture  of  electrons  by  colhsions  in  the  narrow  canal-ray  tube
of  the  Thomson  apparatus,  and  so  produce  parabolas  in  the
quadrant  opposite  to  that  containing  the  normal  ones.  The
sHt  system  of  the  mass-spectrograph  is  specially  designed  to
eliminate  such  collisions  as  far  as  possible  by  exhausting  the
space  between  the  slits.  If  the  means  of  exhaustion  of  this
space  is  dehberately  cut  off,  and  the  normal  electric  and
magnetic  fields  both  reversed  in  sign  it  is  possible,  at  a  small
cost  in  definition  of  the  fines,  to  photograph  the  mass-spectra
of  negatively  charged  particles.  Such  negatively  charged
particles  are  only  formed  by  elements  or  compounds  having
marked  electronegative  properties.  Very  little  work  has  been
done  in  this  interesting  field,  but  certain  ambiguities  in  the
interpretation  of  the  chlorine  results  have  been  satisfactorily
cleared  up  by  its  means.
 
^  J.  J.  Thomson,  Rays  of  Positive  Electricity,  p.  64.
  V.  p.  75.

Latest revision as of 15:10, 31 July 2025

Chapter V - The Mass-Spectrograph

Francis William Aston (1922), Isotopes, ISBN 978-1016732383, Internet Archive.

30. Limitations of the parabola method

The parabola method of analysis of positive rays described in Chapter III, though almost ideal for a general survey of masses and velocities, has objections as a method of precision, many rays are lost by collision in the narrow canal-ray tube; the mean pressure in which must be at least half that in the discharge-bulb; very fine tubes silt up by disintegration under bombardment; the total energy available for photography falls off as the fourth power of the diameter of the canal-ray tube.

The first two objections can be overcome, as will be described below, by replacing the brass or copper tube by fine apertures made in aluminium, a metal which appears to suffer little disintegration, and by exhausting the space between these apertures to the highest degree by means of a subsidiary charcoal tube or pump. The falling off in intensity of the parabolas as one attempts to make them finer is a very serious difficulty, as the accuracy and resolving power depend on the ratio of the thickness to the total magnetic deflexion; and if we increase the latter the electric deflexion must be increased to correspond and the parabolas are drawn out, resulting again in loss of intensity.

Also the nature of the patch thrown on the plate by the use of a long circular tube will clearly be the same as that caused by the fight from an evenly illuminated disc passing through a circular aperture of the same diameter, that is to say it will have a penumbra. Similarly the parabolic streak produced by an infinite series of such patches will not be particularly suitable for accurate measurements as it has no definite edges.

31. Methods of increasing the intensity of the spot

The concentration of the stream of positive rays down the axis of the discharge-bulb is very marked, but there is good evidence for assuming that the intense part of the stream occupies a considerable solid angle. This suggests the possibility of an increase of intensity by means of a device which should select the rays aimed at a particular spot on the plate, whatever direction they come from. For example, a thin gap between two coaxial equiangular cones would allow the rays to be concentrated at the vertex. The dimensions of the patch formed would be roughly those of one given by a cylindrical canal-ray tube of diameter equal to the width of the gap. The increase of intensity would therefore be considerable; but the method is not easy to put into practice, and, in the case of deflexions through large angles, would necessitate a curved photographic surface.

Clearly the simplest way of increasing the intensity of the spot without increasing its dimensions, at any rate in one direction, is to use two parallel straight slits. In the case of the parabola method this device would only be of use in a special case such as the resolution of a close double, as the parabolas will only be sharp at points where they are parallel to the slit.

Such a slit system eliminates the difficulty of the penumbra mentioned above, at any rate so far as measurements at right angles to the line image are concerned.

32. Possibilities of "focussing."

Beams of charged particles which are homogeneous electrically (constant mv2e) or magnetically (constant ve) can be focussed like rays of light by special devices.[1] The method of Dempster, described in the previous Chapter, makes use of a form of magnetic focussing. But the rays generated by the ordinary discharge bulb are heterogeneous both in mv2 and mv so that what is required is an arrangement which will focus all rays of constant mass, even though their velocity may vary over an appreciable range.

33. Principle of the Mass-spectrograph

This purpose is achieved by the arrangement illustrated diagrammatically in Fig. 8. The exact mathematical analysis has now been worked out by R. H. Fowler,[2] but it is proposed to give only the approximate theory here for the sake of simplicity.

Fig. 8. Diagram of Mass-Spectograph.

The rays after arriving at the cathode face pass through two very narrow parallel sUts of special construction Si S3, and the resulting thin ribbon is spread out into an electric spectrum by means of the parallel plates Pi, P2. After emerging from the electric field the rays may be taken, to a first order of approximation, as radiating from a virtual source Z half way through the field on the line Si S2. A group of these rays is now selected by means of the diaphragm D, and allowed to pass between the parallel poles of a magnet. For simplicity the poles are taken as circular, the field between them uniform and of such sign as to bend the rays in the opposite direction to the foregoing electric field.

If θ and φ be the angles (taken algebraically) through which the selected beam of rays is bent by passing through fields of strength X and H, then

θv2=l𝐗em (1)

and

ϕv=L𝐇em (2)

where l, L are the lengths of the paths of the rays in the fields. Equation (1) is only true for small angles, but exact enough for practice. It follows that over the small range of d selected by the diaphragm θv and φv are constant for all rays of given e/m, therefore

δθθ+δvv=0 ,

and

δϕϕ+2δvv=0 ,

so that

δθθ=2δϕϕ ,

when the velocity varies in a group of rays of given e/m.

In order to illustrate in the simplest possible way how this relation may be used to obtain focussing, let us suppose the angles (exaggerated in the diagram) small and the magnetic field acting as if concentrated at the centre O of the pole pieces. If the breadth ZO = b, the group selected will be spread out to a breadth bδθ at O, and at a further distance r the breadth will be

bδθ+r(δθ+δϕ) or δθ(b+r(1+ϕ2θ)) . . (3)

Now as the electric and magnetic deflexions are in opposite directions, θ is a negative angle. Say θ = -θ' . Then if φ > 2θ', the quantity (3) will vanish at a value of r given by

r(ϕ2θ)=b.2θ ,

This equation appears correct within practical limits for large circular pole-pieces.

Referred to axes OX, OY the focus is at r cos (φ-2θ'), r sin (φ-2θ') or r,b.2θ'; so that to a first-order approximation, whatever the fields, so long as the position of the diaphragm is fixed, the foci will all lie on the straight line ZF drawn through Z parallel to OX. For purposes of construction G the image of Z in OY is a convenient reference point, φ being here equal to 4θ'. It is clear that a photographic plate, indicated by the thick line, will be in fair focus for values of e/m over a range large enough for accurate comparison of masses.

34. Optical analogue

PLATE II. Photograph of the Original Mass-Spectrograph set up in the Cavendish Laboratory in 1919.

B, Discharge Tube. A. Anode connected to high potential terminal of induction coil below table. C. Reservoir containing gas to be analysed. I1, I2 Charcoal-liquid air tubes exhausting slit-system and camera. .S. Soft iron plates to shield discharge from stray magnetic field. L. Leads from high tension battery to electric plates. M Du Bois electromagnet. T, Pea lamp for photographing fiducial spot. V, Vacuum-tight and light-tight control for moving photographic plate. W. Camera showing light-tight cap on the left. H, Magnet circuit ammeter. O, Magnet circuit control resistances. G. Gaede rotating mercury pump connected to the camera and the discharge tube by glass tubes and stopcocks.

It may be a help to form an understanding of the principle of the apparatus if we suppose that the beam is one of white light and the electric and magnet fields are glass prisms deflecting the light in opposite directions. The slit system acts as a collimator. If the glass of the first prism has a coefficient of dispersion double that of the second the heterogeneity of the rays of light will cause a spreading of the beam identical with that caused by heterogeneity (in respect to velocity) in the case of the positive rays. It will be clear that if we make the angle of refraction of the second prism more than double that of the first an achromatic image will appear at F.

Since it is a close analogue of the ordinary spectrograph and gives a "spectrum " depending upon mass alone the instrument is called a "mass-spectrograph" and the spectrum it produces a "mass-spectrum." It possesses one notable advantage over the optical spectrograph for, although we can never change the ratio of the dispersions, we can make the refractions whatever we will by the control of X and H, and so bring any desired range of the spectrum on to the plate.

35. The Discharge Tube.

Fig. 9 is a rough diagram of the arrangement of the mass-spectrograph when used for analysing positive rays generated by the ordinary discharge tube method. The discharge-tube B is an ordinary X-ray bulb 20 cm. in T diameter. The anode A is of aluminium wire 3 mm. thick surrounded concentrically by an insulated aluminium tube 7 mm. wide to protect the glass walls, as in the Lodge valve.

Fig. 9. Mass-Spectrograph.

The aluminium cathode C, 2-5 cm. wide, is concave, about 8 cm. radius of curvature, and is placed just in the neck of the bulb this shape and position having been adopted after a short preliminary research.[3] In order to protect the opposite end of the bulb, which would be immediately melted by the very concentrated beam of cathode rays, a silica bulb D about 12 mm. diameter is mounted as indicated. The use of silica as an anticathode has the great advantage of cutting down the production of undesirable X-rays to a minimum. The cathode is earthed.

The discharge is maintained by means of a large induction coil actuated by a mercury coal-gas break; about 100 to 150 watts are passed through the primary, and the bulb is arranged to take from 0.5 to 1 milllampere at potentials ranging from 20,000 to 50,000 volts. Owing to the particular shape and position of the electrodes, especially those of the anode, the bulb acts perfectly as its own rectifier.

The method of mounting the cathode will be readily seen from Fig. 10, which shows part of the apparatus in greater detail. The neck of the bulb is ground off short and cemented with wax to the flat brass collar E, which forms the mouth of an annular space between a wide outer tube F and the inner tube carrying the cathode. The concentric position of the neck is assured by three small ears of brass not shown. The wax joint is kept cool by circulating water through the copper pipe shown in section at G.

Fig 10. Mounting of Cathode of Mass-Spectrograph.

The gas to be analysed is admitted from the fine leak into the annular space and so to the discharge by means of the side-tube attached to F shown in dotted section at Q. Exhaustion is performed by a Gaede mercury-pump through a similar tube on the opposite side. The reason for this arrangement is that the space behind the cathode is the only part of the discharge bulb in which the gas is not raised to an extremely high potential. If the inlet or outlet is anywhere in front of the cathode, falling special guards, the discharge is certain to strike to the pump or the gas reservoir. Such special guards have been made in the past by means of dummy cathodes in the bore of the tubes, but, notwithstanding the fact that the gas can only reach the bulb by diffusion, the present arrangement is far more satisfactory and has the additional advantage of enabling the bulb to be dismounted by breaking one joint only.

36. The Slit System.

The very fine slits used in this apparatus were made with comparative ease as follows: A cylinder of pure aluminium about 10 mm. long by 5 mm. wide is carefully bored with a hole 1 mm. diameter. The resulting thick-walled tube is then cleaned and crushed with a hammer on an anvil until the circular hole becomes a slit about -3 mm. wide. Continuation of this treatment would result in a slit as fine as required giving the maximum resistance to the passage of gas, but its great depth would make the lining up of a pair a matter of extreme difficulty. The crushed tube is therefore now placed between two V-shaped pieces of steel and further crushed between the points of the V's at about its middle point until the required fineness is attained. Practice shows that the best way of doing this is to crush until the walls just touch, and then to open the sHt to the required width by judicious tapping at right angles to that previously employed. With a little care it is possible to make sHts with beautifully parallel sides to almost any degree of fineness, .01 mm. being easily attainable. At this stage the irregularly shaped piece of aluminium is not suited to accurate gas-tight fitting ; it is therefore filled with hard paraffin to protect it from small particles of metal, etc., which if entering cannot be dislodged owing to its shape, and turned up taper to fit the standard mountings. After turning, the paraffin is easily removed by heat and solvents. The centre of the cathode is pierced with a 3 mm. hole, the back of which is coned out to fit one of the standard slits Si. The back of the cathode is turned a gastight fit in the brass tube 2 cm. diameter carrying it, the other end of which bears the brass plug H which is also coned and fitted with the second slit Sa- The two slits, which are roughly .05 mm. wide by 2 mm. long, can be accurately adjusted parallel by means of their diffraction patterns. The space between the sUts, which are about 10 cm. apart, is kept exhausted to the highest degree by the charcoal tube Ii. By this arrangement it will be seen that not only is loss of rays by collision and neutralisation reduced to a minimum but any serious leak of gas from the bulb to the camera is eliminated altogether.

37. The Electric Field

The spreading of the heterogeneous ribbon of rays formed by the slits into an electric spectrum takes place between two parallel flat brass surfaces, Ji, Ja, 5 cm. long, held 2-8 mm. apart by glass distance-pieces, the whole system being wedged immovably in the brass containing-tube in the position shown. The lower surface is cut from a solid cyUnder fitting the tube and connected to it and earth. The upper surface is a thick brass plate, which can be raised to the desired potential, 200-500 volts, by means of a set of small storage-cells. In order to have the plates as near together as possible, they are sloped at 1 in 20 — i.e. half the angle of slope of the mean ray of the part of the spectrum which is to be selected by the diaphragms. Of these there are two: one, K1, an oblong aperture in a clean brass plate, is fixed just in front of the second movable one, K2, which is mounted in the bore of a carefully ground stopcock L. The function of the first diaphragm is to prevent any possibility of charged rays striking the greasy surface of the plug of the stopcock when the latter is in any working position. The variable diaphragm is in effect two square apertures sliding past each other as the plug of the stopcock is turned, the fact that they are not in the same plane being irrelevant. When the stopcock is fully open as sketched in Fig. 10 the angle of rays passing is a maximum, and it may be stopped down to any desired extent by rotation of the plug, becoming zero before any greasy surface is exposed to the rays. Incidentally the stopcock serves another and very convenient use, which is to cut off the camera from the discharge tube, so that the latter need not be filled with air each time the former is opened to change the plate.

38. The Magnetic Field

After leaving the diaphragms the rays pass between the pole-pieces M of a large Du Bois magnet of 2500 turns. The faces of these are circular, 8 cm. diameter, and held 3 mm. apart by brass distance-pieces. The cylindrical pole-pieces themselves are soldered into a brass tube O, which forms part of the camera N. When the latter is built into position, the pole-pieces are drawn by screwed bolts into the arms of the magnet, and so form a structure of great weight and rigidity and provide an admirable foundation for the whole apparatus. Current for the magnet is provided by a special set of large accumulators. With a potential of 300 volts on the electric plates the hydrogen lines are brought on to the scale at about 0.2 ampere, and an increase to 5 amperes, which gives practical saturation, only just brings the singly-charged mercury lines into view. The discharge is protected from the stray field of the magnet by the usual soft iron plates, not shown.

39. The Camera

Fig. 11. The Plateholder of the Camera.

The main body of the camera N is made of stout brass tube 6-4 cm. diameter, shaped to fit on to the transverse tube 0 containing the pole-pieces. The construction of the plate-holder is indicated by the side view in Fig. 9 and an end-on view in Fig. 11. The rays after being magnetically deflected pass between two vertical earthed brass plates Z, Z about 3 mm. apart, and finally reach the photographic plate through a narrow slot 2 mm. wide, 11-8 cm. long, cut in the horizontal metal plate X, X. The three brass plates forming a T-shaped girder are adjusted and locked in position by a set of three leveling-screws, at each end ; the right-hand upper one is omitted in Fig. 11. The plates Z, Z serve to protect the rays completely from any stray electric field, even that caused by the photographic plate itself becoming charged until within a few millimetres of their point of impact.

The photographic plate W, which is a 2 cm. strip cut lengthwise from a 5 x 4 plate, is supported at its ends on two narrow transverse rails which raise it just clear of the plate X, X. Normally it lies to the right of the slot as indicated, and to make an exposure it is moved parallel to itself over the slot by means of a sort of double lazy-tongs carrying wire claws which bracket the ends of the plate as shown. This mechanism, which is not shown in detail is operated by means of a torque rod V working through a ground glass joint. Y is a small willemite screen.

The adjustment of the plate-holder so that the sensitised surface should be at the best focal plane was done by taking a series of exposures of the bright hydrogen lines with different magnetic fields on a large plate placed in the empty camera at a small inclination to the vertical. On developing this, the actual track of the rays could be seen and the locus of points of maximum concentration determined. The final adjustment was made by trial and error and was exceedingly tedious, as air had to be admitted and a new plate inserted after each tentative small alteration of the leveling-screws.

40. Experimental procedure

The plate having been dried in a high vacuum overnight, the whole apparatus is exhausted as completely as possible by the pump with the stopcock L open. Ii and I2 are then cut off from the pump by stopcocks and immersed in liquid air for an hour or so. The electric field, which may range from 200 to 500 volts, is then applied and a small current passed through the magnet sufficient to bring the bright hydrogen molecule spot on to the willemite screen Y, where it can be inspected through the plate-glass back of the cap P, In the meantime the leak, pump, and coil, have all been started to get the bulb into the desired state.

When this has become steady, Jj is earthed to prevent any rays reaching the camera when the plate is moved over the slot to its first position, which is judged by inspection through P with a non-actinic lamp. The magnet current having been set to the particular value desired and the diaphragm adjusted, the coil is momentarily interrupted while Jj is raised to the desired potential, after which the exposure starts. During this, preferably both at the beginning and the end, light from a lamp T is admitted for a few seconds down the tube R (Fig. 9) the ends of which are pierced with two tiny circular holes. The lower hole is very close to the plate, so that a circular dot or fiducial spot is formed from which the measurements of the lines may be made.

The exposures may range from 20 seconds in the case of hydrogen lines to 30 minutes or more, 15 minutes being usually enough. As soon as it is complete the above procedure is repeated, and the plate moved into the second position. In this way as many as six spectra can be taken on one plate, after which L is shut, I2 warmed up, and air admitted to the camera. The cap P, which is on a ground joint, can now be removed, and the exposed plate seized and taken out with a special pair of forceps. A fresh plate is now immediately put in, P replaced and the camera again exhausted, in which state it is left till the next operation.

41. Form of the Spectrum Lines

Fig. 12. Form of the Spectrum Lines.

Owing to the form of the slits used, the shape of the spot formed when undeflected rays from such a sht system strike a photograph surface normally, is somewhat as indicated at a (Fig. 12). When they strike the plate obliquely the image would be spread out in one direction, as in b. This would be the actual form in the apparatus, if the deflexions of the mean and extreme rays (i.e., the rays forming the centre and the tips) were identical. This is true of the magnetic field since each cuts the same number of lines of force ; but it is not so in the case of the electric deflexion. Owing in part to the fact that the plates J1, J2 are rectangular and in part to the stray field between the charged plate Ji and the earthed tube in which it is mounted, the extreme rays passing diagonally will be deflected more than the mean rays and the spot bent into the form shown at c. The convex side will be in the direction of the magnetic deflexion, as this is opposed to the deflexion causing the bend. The image on the plate will therefore be the part of this figure falling on the narrow slot in X, X; and as the apparatus is not exactly symmetrical, its shape in the spectra is the figure lying between the lines X, X in Fig. 12, c.

42. The distribution of the mass-spectrum over the photographic plate

In order to study the positions of the focus F (Fig 8) on the plate corresponding to different values of the effective mass m when X and H are constant, we may assume perfect focussing and only consider a single median ray. If R is the radius of curvature of the path of a ray of effective mass m while in the magnetic field, and d the radius of the field, clearly tan ½φ = d/R. But X and θ are constant, hence mv2 must be constant so that the radius of curvature in the magnetic field varies as √m. We may therefore write

tan12ϕ=m0m . . . (4)

where m0 is a constant and can be interpreted as that mass which under the conditions of the experiment is bent through a right angle in the magnetic field.

Again if ON the length of the perpendicular dropped from the centre of the magnetic field upon ZF = P (a constant) then

NF=pcot(ϕ2θ) . . . (5)

By combining (4) and (5) we get an expression for NF/p in terms of m0 and m. This is complicated,[4] but its differential can be shown to vanish when tan ½φ = tan 2θ Thus the mass-scale is approximately linear near ;φ = 4θ

This linear law was observed experimentally at the very outset and though at the time it was unexplained it added greatly to the ease and accuracy of the determinations of m.

The quantity actually measured is the distance between a fixed point on the photographic place called the "fiducial spot"[5] and the focussed image F. Let us call this distance D. D and NF differ by a constant k — about 5.4 cm. in the present apparatus — so that the relation between D and m has the form D = f = (m/m0) where f is a function in which all the coefficients p, k, and tan 2θ are geometrical constants, the fields only affect m0. It follows directly that so long as the apparatus is rigid: If D1 and D2 are the distances from the fiducial spot of any two points on the plate and m0 and m, the corresponding masses for given values of D1 and D2, the ratio m1/m2 will be the same in every photograph.

43. Practical method of deducing the effective mass of a particle from the position of its line on the photograph

The mathematical investigation described above is of interest as it explains the results obtained, but the actual determination of masses from mass-spectra is a purely empirical process, and consists in the comparison of the positions of the Unes caused by the masses in question with the positions of known reference lines. The only assumption made was that given at the end of the previous paragraph and even this was capable of verification by experiment, using such methods as that described on p. 57, or even more fundamentally, in the special case of the ratio 2/1, by the known identity of the mass ratios O2/O, O/O++, and C/C++.

The reference fines used at the outset of the work were lines given by particles of elements and compounds the relative masses of which were known to at least the order of accuracy aimed for. The procedure was somewhat as follows. A series of spectra were taken with say a mixture of CO2 and CH4 in the discharge tube. Previous experience with the parabola method of analysis led to the expectation that lines at 6-C++ , 8-O++ +, 12-C, 16-O, 28-CO, 32-O2, 44-CO2 would certainly be present, there would also be a series of hydrocarbon lines between 12 and 16, CH, CH2, CH3 which could be regarded as known. A spectrum was selected containing as many as possible of these known lines and their masses m1, m2, m3 were plotted against the distances of the lines from the fixed fiducial spot and a curve drawn through the points so obtained. This is our first calibration curve of necessity inaccurate owing to the gaps between the points. A second spectrum was now taken in which the same fines appeared in a different place, for by altering the magnetic field we can place them wherever we please, and the new set of distances from the fiducial spot measured. These distances were now transformed into masses (no longer integral) m1', m2', m3', by means of the curve previously drawn. Supposing the curve to be accurate and the ratio law to hold

m1'm1=m2'm2=m3'm3=r

where r is clearly a measure of the change in m0 in the mathematical discussion above. In practice these ratios were found to be very nearly the same, so that a mean value of r could be taken with confidence. The known masses multiplied by that mean now gave a new set of points on the original curve. By carrying on this process all the serious gaps in the curve could be bridged and its accuracy brought up to the required standard.

The calibration curve so formed renders the identification of one fine sufficient to deduce the masses corresponding to all the other lines on the plate, and as in general many lines are known on each spectrum, its accuracy is continually subject to fresh test. In practice it was found perfectly reliable so long as none of the geometrical constants of the apparatus were altered.

Owing to the linear relation at φ = 2θ the actual curve was very nearly straight for a considerable portion of its length. This allowed the following alternative procedure to be adopted if desired. A linear relation was assumed and a table of corrections made by means of reference lines, and these corrections when subtracted from the observed displacements gave an exactly linear relation with mass. A correction-curve (apparently parabolic) was drawn, from which the appropriate correction for any displacement could be written down and the mass corresponding to this displacement obtained by simple proportion.

In connection with the use of reference lines it might be thought difficult to know which of the lines on a plate corresponds to a known mass, since they are not labelled in any way. A little consideration will show that the same difficulty is raised in the case of the standard lines of the iron arc and the stars in the sky, yet neither the spectroscopist nor the astronomer have the least difficulty in recognising enough for their purpose, indeed a mistake in identity would lead in most cases to an error so gross as to compel immediate attention. This comparison is perhaps a little flattering to the lines on a mass-spectrum as these alter their relative intensity to some extent, but in particular cases, such as those of the hydrocarbons and mercury, identification is, after a little experience, as easy as that of the Pole Star or of the D lines in the spectrum of sodium.

44. Comparison of masses by the method of "coincidence"

The method of deducing the masses of particles from the position of their lines described in the foregoing paragraph is simple and straightforward. It also has the great advantage of not requiring an accurate knowledge of the numerical values of the electric and magnetic fields. The only requisite is that these should be constant during the exposure, and even if this constancy is not quite perfect the shift in position will affect all the lines known and unknown alike and therefore introduce no serious error into the results obtained. There is, however, another method of comparing masses which requires no knowledge, either theoretical or empirical, of the relation between effective mass and measured displacement. This is independent of the calibration curve and therefore constitutes a valuable check on results obtained by its use. It depends upon the following considerations: Suppose we wish to compare an unknown mass m' with a known mass m. A mass-spectrum is taken with fields X and H such that the mass m gives a fine at a certain position on the plate. The fields are now altered until the line caused by the unknown mass m' is brought to the identical position on the plate previously occupied by the fine due to m. The paths of the rays in the two cases must be identical, hence if X', H' are the new values of the fields it follows at once from equations (1) and (2)[6] that

m'm=XX'×(H'H)2.

Now it is only necessary to measure one of the fields if we keep the other constant and therefore H, which cannot be measured or reproduced accurately, is kept constant, and X is measured. For the latter purpose it is only necessary to measure the potentials applied to the plates P1, P2, which can be done with the greatest ease and accuracy.

Thus, to take a numerical illustration, the position occupied by the line due to carbon (12) with a potential on the plates of 320 volts should be exactly coincident with that occupied by the line due to Oxygen (16) with 240 volts when the magnetic field is kept constant. All such coincidences have so far been found to occur within the error of experiment, whatever the position on the plate.

Methods depending on the measured variation of X with H constant have some practical disadvantages. The first and most obvious of these is that any small change in the value of the magnetic field between the two exposures will lead to a definite error, this error will be double the percentage change in the field, since the square of the latter is involved. The second objection is founded on considerations of intensity. If the parabola method of analysis is compared with the mass-spectrograph it will readily be observed that, in effect, the latter focusses at a point all the rays which in the former method form a short element of arc on a parabola. The length of the element of arc is determined by the angle of the electric spectrum allowed to pass, i.e. the width of the diaphragm. Its position on the parabola is at our disposal, for, referring to Fig. 4, p. 28, it wiU be seen that the higher we make X, that is to say the higher the energy of the beam of rays we select at constants, the nearer the element of arc will approach the axis OY, in fact its distance from that axis will simply be inversely proportional to X. Also, however many parabolas we consider and however much we move them about by changing H, so long as X is constant the elements of arc selected will all he on a line parallel to OY. Now it has already been pointed out[7] that the intensity of normal parabolas is a maximum near the head p, where the energy corresponds to the full fall of potential across the discharge tube, and fades away rapidly, in some cases very rapidly indeed, at points more distant from the origin. In order to get the greatest intensity at the focussed spot we must therefore choose X so that the element of arc selected will be near the head of the parabola. This is done in practice by observing visually, by means of a willemite screen, the very bright Une given by the hydrogen molecule while different potentials are apphed to the plates. The best value of X so determined must also be the best value for all the other normal lines, so that in the ordinary calibration curve method, when X is kept constant, it is possible to use conditions in which all the normal lines on the mass-spectra will be at their brightest together, whatever range we bring on to the plate by altering the magnetic field.

In the coincidence method this very fortunate circumstance cannot be taken advantage of, for with H constant the selected elements of arc will now lie on a line parallel to OX. We can only arrange matters for one, the lighter, of the two masses to be compared, to be at its optimum. In the case of the heavier the selected arc must he at a greater distance from the origin and therefore provide a much feebler intensity. The disparity in brightness, due to this effect will be the greater the greater the ratio of the masses considered; it can be corrected to some degree by softening the discharge tube while the heavier mass is being photographed.

In spite of these drawbacks the principle underlying the coincidence method is probably the most suitable for massratio measurements of the highest accuracy. The fact that the paths of the rays is the same in the case of both masses eliminates all errors due to non-uniformity of the fields and the results are independent of any assumptions as regards the ratios of the reference lines themselves. It is the only method at present available in the case of elements far removed, on the mass-scale, from the reference lines, and a modification of it called the method of "bracketing" has been successfully used to evaluate the masses of helium and hydrogen.[8]

45. The measurement of the lines

The accurate determination of the distance of the lines from the fiducial spot is a physical problem of considerable interest. The image itself is due to a caustic of rays, the edge of which will be sharp on the side of maximum magnetic displacement, so that this, the left side in the Plates, may be expected to maintain its sharpness when a large diaphragm is in use, while the other will fade away gradually. Hence very bright lines will be broadened to the right by this effect (which is analogous to spherical astigmatism in ordinary lenses), but to the left the only broadening will be that due to ordinary halation. The relative importance of these two forms of spreading can be gauged by taking photographs with a very small diaphragm, for then the first will be eliminated and the second can be estimated by comparing lines of different intensity. It is found that for ordinary diaphragm apertures the halation effect is much the smaller; it can also be minimised by using lines of approximately equal intensity so that the most reliable measurements of lines for position are obtained from their left-hand edges. This is well illustrated in the " bracketed " lines of hydrogen a and c, Plate III. In {a) measurements of the left hand side of the three lines shows this bracket to be really symmetrical though it does not appear so to the eye, on account of the astigmatic spreading of the middle line caused by the use of an open diaphragm and rather too long an exposure. In (c) the diaphragm was almost closed and the exposures more carefully adjusted, so that both sides of the lines are sharp and their breadths practically identical.

The most accurate measurements were made on a comparator. The spectrum was set as closely as possible parallel to the axis of the instrument, and the distances between the left-hand edge of the lines and the fiducial spot read off on a Zeiss standard scale. For faint lines it was necessary to use a very low power eyepiece of the reading microscope, and in the case of the faintest lines of all, the best results could be obtained by laying a millimetre scale on the plate and estimating the distance from the fiducial spot to the optical centre of the lines, by the unaided eye.

46. Resolving power and accuracy of mass determinstion

Taking the width of the slits as 1/25 mm. and putting in the dimensions of the present apparatus the theory shows that in the region φ = 4θ lines differing by a little less than 1 per cent, should be just separated. In actual practice a better result was obtained, for the instrument is capable of separating the lines of xenon, which differ by 1 in 130 ; this is probably because the part of the line which falls on the strip of plate exposed is due to the narrower edges of the slits.

The numerical relation between mass and position in this part of the spectrum corresponds to a shift of 1.39 mm. for a change of mass of 1 per cent., so that even with the unaided eye an accuracy of 1 part in 1,000 can be approached. Although it is sufficient in theory to know the mass of one Hne only to determine, with the calibration curve, the masses of all the others, in practice every effort is made to bracket any unknown line by reference lines and only to trust comparative measurements when the lines are fairly close together. Under these conditions an accuracy of 1 in 1,000 is claimed and there is httle doubt that in favourable cases it is exceeded.

47. Order of results and nomenclature

In the descriptions of the results obtained with the mass-spectrograph contained in the following chapters the order of the elements given is, when possible, that in which the experiments were made. There is a practical reason for this procedure, as in most cases it was impossible to eliminate any element used before the following one was introduced. Evacuation and washing have little effect, as the gases appear to get embedded in the surface of the discharge bulb and are only released very gradually by subsequent discharge.

The problem of nomenclature of the isotopes became serious when the very complex nature of the heavy elements was apparent. It has been decided for the present to adopt the rather clumsy but definite and elastic one of using the chemical symbol of the complex element, with an index corresponding to its mass : e.g. Ne22 Rb87 This system is made reasonable by the fact that the constituents of complex elements have all so far proved to have masses expressible in whole numbers.

48. Lines of the First, Second and higher Orders

It was shown on page 30 that particles having two charges gave a parabola corresponding to an effective mass of one hah the normal mass. In the same way a particle with three charges wiU have an effective mass of one third, and so on.

These apparent masses will duly make their appearance on mass-spectra as lines corresponding to simple fractions of the real mass causing them. It is convenient in these cases to borrow the nomenclature of optics and refer to the Unes given by singly, doubly, and multiply charged particles respectively as Unes of the first, second, and higher orders. Thus the molecule of oxygen gives a first order fine at 32, and its atom first and second order lines at 16 and 8.

The empirical rule that molecules only give first order lines[9] is very useful in helping to differentiate between atoms and compound molecules of the same apparent mass. Some results given below,[10] however, show that in certain cases it breaks down, so that inferences made from it must not be taken as absolutely conclusive.

49. Negative mass-spectra

It has been mentioned that positive rays could become negatively charged by the capture of electrons by collisions in the narrow canal-ray tube of the Thomson apparatus, and so produce parabolas in the quadrant opposite to that containing the normal ones. The sHt system of the mass-spectrograph is specially designed to eliminate such collisions as far as possible by exhausting the space between the slits. If the means of exhaustion of this space is deliberately cut off, and the normal electric and magnetic fields both reversed in sign it is possible, at a small cost in definition of the lines, to photograph the mass-spectra of negatively charged particles. Such negatively charged particles are only formed by elements or compounds having marked electronegative properties. Very little work has been done in this interesting field, but certain ambiguities in the interpretation of the chlorine results have been satisfactorily cleared up by its means.

References

  1. Aston, Phil. Mag., 38, 709, 1919.[1]
  2. Aston and Fowler, Phil. Mag., 1922.[2]
  3. Aston, Proc. Camb. Phil. Soc, 19, 317. 1919.[3]
  4. Loc. cit.
  5. V. p. 53.
  6. F. p. 45.
  7. P. 29.
  8. V. p. 69.
  9. J. J. Thomson, Rays of Positive Electricity, p. 64.
  10. V. p. 75.

Francis William Aston (1922), Isotopes, ISBN 978-1016732383, Internet Archive.