Mass spectroscopy

From Mass Spec Terms
IUPAC RECOMMENDATIONS 2013
Mass spectroscopy
This term is obsolete.
Related Term(s): mass spectrometry
Reference(s):
From Definitions of Terms Relating to Mass Spectrometry (IUPAC Recommendations 2013); DOI: 10.1351/PAC-REC-06-04-06 © IUPAC 2013.

Index of Recommended Terms

 




Orange Book

ORANGE BOOK DEFINITION

IUPAC. Analytical Division. Compendium of Analytical Nomenclature (the Orange Book). Definitive Rules, 1979 (see also Orange Book 2023)

Mass spectroscopy

The study of systems by a process of forming gaseous ions, with or without fragmentation, which are then characterized by their mass/charge ratios and their relative abundances.

IUPAC 1997 Orange Book Chapter 12
Index of Orange Book Terms


Gold Book

GOLD BOOK DEFINITION

IUPAC. Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the Gold Book). Compiled by A. D. McNaught and A.Wilkinson. Blackwell Scientific Publications, Oxford (1997).

Mass spectroscopy

The study of systems by causing the formation of gaseous ions, with or without fragmentation, which are then characterized by their mass-to-charge ratios and relative abundances.

IUPAC Gold Book
Index of Gold Book Terms


IUPAC Gold book definition of spectrometry and spectroscopy

Spectroscopy
The study of physical systems by the electromagnetic radiation with which they interact or that they produce.
Spectrometry
The measurement of electromagnetic radiation as a means of obtaining information about physical systems and their components.

Gold Book

GOLD BOOK DEFINITION

IUPAC. Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the Gold Book). Compiled by A. D. McNaught and A.Wilkinson. Blackwell Scientific Publications, Oxford (1997).

Mass spectroscopy

http://goldbook.iupac.org/S05848.html

spectroscopy

Also contains definition of: spectrometry

The study of physical systems[1] by the electromagnetic radiation with which they interact or that they produce. Spectrometry is the measurement of such radiations as a means of obtaining information about the systems and their components. In certain types of optical spectroscopy, the radiation originates from an external source and is modified by the system, whereas in other types, the radiation originates within the system itself.

Source:

PAC, 1986, 58, 1737 (Quantities and units in clinical chemistry: Nebulizer and flame properties in flame emission and absorption spectrometry (Recommendations 1986)) on page 1738 http://dx.doi.org/10.1351/pac198658121737 - "Representative parts of the system (for example, serum) may be treated (for example, diluted) before measurement. In analytical chemistry, the instrumentation or parts of it may also be considered as systems"; "'Component' may be a chemical compound (e.g. ethanol), an ion (e.g. Na+), a chemical group within one or more compounds (e.g. amino group), or any of several chemical species sharing one common property (e.g. alkaline phosphatase). In this document,the word 'component' is also used to designate a neutral atom whose concentration in a physicochemical plasma is proportional to the concentration of the original component in the material being analysed.".

IUPAC Gold Book
Index of Gold Book Terms


See also

External links

  1. Representative parts of the system (for example, serum) may be treated (for example, diluted) before measurement. In analytical chemistry, the instrumentation or parts of it may also be considered as systems