Journal article 1384 views 280 downloads
A ‘Periodic Table’ of mass spectrometry instrumentation and acronyms
Analytical Methods, Volume: 9, Issue: 35, Pages: 5086 - 5090
Swansea University Author: Ruth Godfrey
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Copyright Royal Society of Chemistry, see http://www.rsc.org/Membership/Networking/InterestGroups/Analytical/AMC/TechnicalBriefs.asp : "AMC Technical Briefs may be freely reproduced and distributed in exactly the same form as published here, in print or electronic media, without formal permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry. Copies must not be offered for sale and the copyright notice must not be removed or obscured in any way. Any other reuse of this document, in whole or in part, requires permission in advance from the Royal Society of Chemistry."
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DOI (Published version): 10.1039/c7ay90114c
Abstract
The number of acronyms in mass spectrometry (MS) and hyphenated techniques are growing rapidly. The ever-widening range of users of MS technology has led to variations in terminology and how it has been applied. The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) has undertaken a review of...
Published in: | Analytical Methods |
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ISSN: | 1759-9660 1759-9679 |
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Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
2017
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Online Access: |
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa35170 |
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2020-12-24T03:52:43Z |
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2020-12-23T16:48:58.8475422 v2 35170 2017-09-08 A ‘Periodic Table’ of mass spectrometry instrumentation and acronyms b7e381bae1b3f74a3521be56c9b2d2ae 0000-0002-8830-3625 Ruth Godfrey Ruth Godfrey true false 2017-09-08 MEDS The number of acronyms in mass spectrometry (MS) and hyphenated techniques are growing rapidly. The ever-widening range of users of MS technology has led to variations in terminology and how it has been applied. The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) has undertaken a review of MS nomenclature resulting in an extensive publication, describing over 500 terms, and is the defining resource for mass spectrometrists. However, for less experienced users of MS, this IUPAC document may require greater explanation as it is not intended to explain the basis of these terms. Given this, the Analytical Methods Committee (AMC) of the Royal Society of Chemistry highlighted an alternative text was required to help understand these terms, how and why they are used in combination, that may be accessible to non-MS experts. This manuscript describes the structure of typical MS instrumentation (sample introduction, ionisation source, mass analyser, detector, data acquisition/processing) and hyphenated technologies whereby each section is discussed and summarised in context and presented as a recognisable tabulated format. Journal Article Analytical Methods 9 35 5086 5090 Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) 1759-9660 1759-9679 mass spectrometry, chromatography, instrumentation, abbreviations, 24 8 2017 2017-08-24 10.1039/c7ay90114c http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c7ay90114c COLLEGE NANME Medical School COLLEGE CODE MEDS Swansea University 2020-12-23T16:48:58.8475422 2017-09-08T15:10:09.0636802 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences Swansea University Medical School - Medicine Ruth Godfrey 0000-0002-8830-3625 1 0035170-08092017151445.pdf MSperiodictable-publishedversion.pdf 2017-09-08T15:14:45.1570000 Output 1002526 application/pdf Version of Record true 2017-09-01T00:00:00.0000000 Copyright Royal Society of Chemistry, see http://www.rsc.org/Membership/Networking/InterestGroups/Analytical/AMC/TechnicalBriefs.asp : "AMC Technical Briefs may be freely reproduced and distributed in exactly the same form as published here, in print or electronic media, without formal permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry. Copies must not be offered for sale and the copyright notice must not be removed or obscured in any way. Any other reuse of this document, in whole or in part, requires permission in advance from the Royal Society of Chemistry." true eng |
title |
A ‘Periodic Table’ of mass spectrometry instrumentation and acronyms |
spellingShingle |
A ‘Periodic Table’ of mass spectrometry instrumentation and acronyms Ruth Godfrey |
title_short |
A ‘Periodic Table’ of mass spectrometry instrumentation and acronyms |
title_full |
A ‘Periodic Table’ of mass spectrometry instrumentation and acronyms |
title_fullStr |
A ‘Periodic Table’ of mass spectrometry instrumentation and acronyms |
title_full_unstemmed |
A ‘Periodic Table’ of mass spectrometry instrumentation and acronyms |
title_sort |
A ‘Periodic Table’ of mass spectrometry instrumentation and acronyms |
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b7e381bae1b3f74a3521be56c9b2d2ae_***_Ruth Godfrey |
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Ruth Godfrey |
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Ruth Godfrey |
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Analytical Methods |
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Swansea University |
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1759-9660 1759-9679 |
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10.1039/c7ay90114c |
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Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) |
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description |
The number of acronyms in mass spectrometry (MS) and hyphenated techniques are growing rapidly. The ever-widening range of users of MS technology has led to variations in terminology and how it has been applied. The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) has undertaken a review of MS nomenclature resulting in an extensive publication, describing over 500 terms, and is the defining resource for mass spectrometrists. However, for less experienced users of MS, this IUPAC document may require greater explanation as it is not intended to explain the basis of these terms. Given this, the Analytical Methods Committee (AMC) of the Royal Society of Chemistry highlighted an alternative text was required to help understand these terms, how and why they are used in combination, that may be accessible to non-MS experts. This manuscript describes the structure of typical MS instrumentation (sample introduction, ionisation source, mass analyser, detector, data acquisition/processing) and hyphenated technologies whereby each section is discussed and summarised in context and presented as a recognisable tabulated format. |
published_date |
2017-08-24T19:19:35Z |
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11.047609 |