Analytical Techniques: Mass Spectrometry
Leo A. Raphaelian, Chemical Technology Division, Argonne National Laboratory
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General Use |
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- Analysis of complex mixtures of volatile compounds |
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- In mass spectrometry/mass spectrometry, analysis of nonvolatile compounds |
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- In pyrolysis gas chromatography/mass spectroscopy, analysis and quality control of polymers |
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- In liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry, analysis of heat-sensitive and degradable compounds, such as biological materials |
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Examples of Applications |
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- Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry: Mixtures of volatile compounds in petroleum oil, coal gasification and liquefaction products, oil shale, and tar sands; pollutants in air, waste water, and solid waste; drugs and metabolites; pesticides; and additives, such as antioxidants and plasticizers in plastics |
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- Liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry: Mixtures of nonvolatile and heat-sensitive compounds |
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- Mass spectrometry/mass spectrometry: Mixtures of nonvolatile and high molecular weight solids |
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- Pyrolysis gas chromatography/mass spectrometry: Analysis of polymers and their additives |
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Samples |
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- Form: Solids, liquids, and gases; all organics and some inorganics |
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- Size: For gas chromatography/mass spectrometry, a 1-
to 5- |
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- Preparation: Samples should be prepared to conform to the sample size restrictions given above |
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Limitations |
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- Compound(s) must be ionizable |
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- Detection limit is from 5 to 20 ng, depending on the compound. In selected ion monitoring gas chromatography/mass spectrometry, the detection limit can be as low as 0.5 pg |
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Estimated Analysis Time |
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- When analyzing one compound, direct introduction of sample takes 10-20 min per analysis. For gas chromatography/mass spectrometry, analysis of 1 to 2 compounds takes approximately 15 min, while analysis of 20 or more compounds takes 180 min or more |
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- Analysis and interpretation of data: Variable (15 min to days depending on the number of compounds analyzed) |
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Capabilities of Related Techniques |
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- Gas chromatography/Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy: Functional group analysis, but at least an order of magnitude less sensitive |
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- Nuclear magnetic resonance: Only single compounds and at least two orders of magnitude less sensitive |
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- Secondary ion mass spectroscopy: A mass spectrometry method for looking only at surfaces of materials |
Reprinted with permission of ASM International®.
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