Techniques and instrumentation are described for analyses of substances,
including complex samples/mixtures that require separation prior to
characterization of individual components. A method is disclosed for
separation of ion mixtures and identification of ions, including protein
and other macromolecular ions and their different structural isomers.
Analyte ions are not free to rotate during the separation, but are
substantially oriented with respect to the drift direction. Alignment is
achieved by applying, at a particular angle to the drift field, a much
stronger alternating electric field that "locks" the ion dipoles with
moments exceeding a certain value. That value depends on the buffer gas
composition, pressure, and temperature, but may be as low as .about.3
Debye under certain conditions. The presently disclosed method measures
the direction-specific cross-sections that provide the structural
information complementing that obtained from known methods, and, when
coupled to those methods, increases the total peak capacity and
specificity of gas-phase separations. Simultaneous 2-D separations by
direction-specific cross sections along and orthogonally to the ion
dipole direction are also possible.