Sign In

6.4 : Mass Spectrometers

This lesson details the instrumentation of a mass spectrometer—a physical instrument to perform mass spectrometry on analyte molecules and record the characteristic mass spectra. This is achieved via three chief functions:

  1. Conversion of the gas-phase analyte atoms/molecules into a beam of positive or negative charged ions by ionization.
  2. Separation of the charged species based on their mass-to-charge ratio.
  3. Recording the relative abundance of each type of ion.

In the ionization chamber of the mass spectrometer, the vaporized analyte in a vacuum is struck with high-energy electrons. The electron's energy is around 70 eV, sufficient to strip an electron from the analyte. The resultant molecular ion further fragments into charged species and neutral molecules. The mass spectrometer only records the mass of charged species, as the charge enables the control of molecules by an electric or magnetic field.

The molecular ion and its charged fragments are accelerated by a series of negatively charged accelerator plates positioned appropriately into the detector in the analyzing chamber. A magnetic field is applied on the path between the accelerator plate and detector, which causes a curve in the path of charged species. At a constant magnetic field, the radius of curvature depends on the molecular mass of the charged species. Placing a slit in front of the detector ensures that only charged species of a particular molecular weight reach the detector.

By varying the magnetic field, the charged species of all molecular weights can be recorded at the detector, each unique molecular weight species at a time. By scanning through all the magnetic fields, the mass spectrometer provides information on the relative abundance of all charged species as the mass spectrum.

Tags
Mass SpectrometerMass SpectrometryIonization ChamberCharged IonsMass to charge RatioMolecular IonFragmentationElectric FieldMagnetic FieldDetectorRelative AbundanceAccelerator PlatesCharged SpeciesMass Spectrum

From Chapter 6:

article

Now Playing

6.4 : Mass Spectrometers

Principles of Mass Spectrometry

3.2K Views

article

6.1 : Mass Spectrometry: Overview

Principles of Mass Spectrometry

2.4K Views

article

6.2 : Mass Spectrometry: Isotope Effect

Principles of Mass Spectrometry

1.1K Views

article

6.3 : Mass Spectrometry: Molecular Fragmentation Overview

Principles of Mass Spectrometry

2.0K Views

article

6.5 : Mass Spectrum

Principles of Mass Spectrometry

921 Views

article

6.6 : Mass Spectrum: Interpretation

Principles of Mass Spectrometry

540 Views

article

6.7 : Mass Analyzers: Overview

Principles of Mass Spectrometry

248 Views

article

6.8 : Mass Analyzers: Common Types

Principles of Mass Spectrometry

268 Views

article

6.9 : High-Resolution Mass Spectrometry (HRMS)

Principles of Mass Spectrometry

783 Views

article

6.10 : Mass Spectrometry: Complex Analysis

Principles of Mass Spectrometry

407 Views

article

6.11 : Tandem Mass Spectrometry

Principles of Mass Spectrometry

390 Views

article

6.12 : Gas Chromatography–Mass Spectrometry (GC–MS)

Principles of Mass Spectrometry

2.6K Views

article

6.13 : Inductively Coupled Plasma–Mass Spectrometry (ICP–MS): Overview

Principles of Mass Spectrometry

379 Views

article

6.14 : Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS): Interferences

Principles of Mass Spectrometry

229 Views

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved