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Quantitative Metrics for Assessment of Chemical Image Quality and Spatial Resolution...

by Vilmos Kertesz, John F Cahill, Gary J Van Berkel
Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry
Publication Date
Page Numbers
927 to 932
Volume
30
Issue
7

Rationale: Currently objective/quantitative descriptions of the quality and spatial resolution of mass spectrometry derived chemical images are not standardized. Development of these standardized metrics is required to objectively describe chemical imaging capabilities of existing and/or new mass spectrometry imaging technologies. Such metrics would allow unbiased judgment of intra-laboratory advancement and/or inter-laboratory comparison for these technologies if used together with standardized surfaces.
Methods: Two image metrics, viz., “chemical image contrast” (ChemIC) based on signal-to-noise related statistical measures on chemical image pixels and “corrected resolving power factor” (cRPF) constructed from statistical analysis of mass-to-charge chronograms across features of interest in an image were developed. These metrics, quantifying chemical image quality and spatial resolution, respectively, were used to evaluate chemical images of a model photoresist patterned surface collected using a laser ablation/liquid vortex capture mass spectrometry imaging system under different instrument operational parameters.
Results: The calculated ChemIC and cRPF metrics determined in an unbiased fashion the relative ranking of chemical image quality obtained with the laser ablation/liquid vortex capture mass spectrometry imaging system. These rankings were used to show that both chemical image contrast and spatial resolution deteriorated with increasing surface scan speed, increased lane spacing and decreasing size of surface features.
Conclusions: ChemIC and cRPF, respectively, were developed and successfully applied for the objective description of chemical image quality and spatial resolution of chemical images collected from model surfaces using a laser ablation/liquid vortex capture mass spectrometry imaging system.