Paper
19 October 1983 Laser Mass Spectrometry
Jiin-Wu Chai, Gerald Rhodes, Jon T. Meek, James P. Reilly
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The conjunction of laser induced molecular ionization with mass spectrometry is particularly fortuitous since it enables us to learn more about the former phenomenon by exploiting the latter technique while at the same time we may be able to improve the latter technique by exploiting some of the unique properties of the former phenomenon. One of the most significant features is the potential impact that laser ionization mass spectrometry may have in analytical chemistry. In order to better measure this, we have investigated the ionization efficiency of a variety of organic compounds. The combination of a capillary column gas chromatograph with a laser ionization mass spectrometer is found to be an ultrasensitive and selective method of chemical analysis. Polyaromatic hydrocarbons can be detected at the multifemtogram level with parts per trillion sensitivity. In some cases previously unresolvable isomers are readily distin-guished. Complementary laser photoelectron experiments have been conducted. While these were originally designed to elucidate ionization and mass spectral fragmentation mechanisms, they are now generating a vast array of new ion spectroscopic data. Our recent results in the previously unexplored area of UV laser induced surface ionization are discussed and their relevance to mass spectrometry is considered.
© (1983) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Jiin-Wu Chai, Gerald Rhodes, Jon T. Meek, and James P. Reilly "Laser Mass Spectrometry", Proc. SPIE 0426, Laser-Based Ultrasensitive Spectroscopy and Detection V, (19 October 1983); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.936249
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Cited by 31 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Ionization

Ions

Molecules

Mass spectrometry

Spectroscopy

Molecular lasers

Photons

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