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  2. Chlorine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chlorine

    Chlorine pentafluoride (ClF 5) is made on a large scale by direct fluorination of chlorine with excess fluorine gas at 350 °C and 250 atm, and on a small scale by reacting metal chlorides with fluorine gas at 100–300 °C. It melts at −103 °C and boils at −13.1 °C.

  3. Mass spectral interpretation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_spectral_interpretation

    Mass spectral interpretation is the method employed to identify the chemical formula, characteristic fragment patterns and possible fragment ions from the mass spectra. [1] [2] Mass spectra is a plot of relative abundance against mass-to-charge ratio. It is commonly used for the identification of organic compounds from electron ionization mass ...

  4. Mass spectrometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_spectrometry

    Ion mobility spectrometry-mass spectrometry (IMS/MS or IMMS) is a technique where ions are first separated by drift time through some neutral gas under an applied electrical potential gradient before being introduced into a mass spectrometer. [43] Drift time is a measure of the collisional cross section relative to the charge of the ion.

  5. Mass chromatogram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_chromatogram

    A mass chromatogram is a representation of mass spectrometry data as a chromatogram, where the x-axis represents time and the y-axis represents signal intensity. [1] The source data contains mass information; however, it is not graphically represented in a mass chromatogram in favor of visualizing signal intensity versus time.

  6. Mass spectrum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_spectrum

    Electron ionization mass spectrum of toluene. Note parent peak corresponding to molecular mass M = 92 (C 7 H 8 +) and highest peak at M-1 = 91 (C 7 H 7 +, quasi-stable tropylium cation). A mass spectrum is a histogram plot of intensity vs. mass-to-charge ratio (m/z) in a chemical sample, [1] usually acquired using an instrument called a mass ...

  7. Direct analysis in real time - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_analysis_in_real_time

    The DART ion source is a kind of gas-phase ionization, and it requires some sort of volatility of the analyte to support thermally assisted desorption of analyte ions. [14] This limits the size range of the molecules that can be analyzed by DART i.e. m/z 50 to 1200. [1] [15] DART-MS is capable of semi-quantitative and quantitative analysis. To ...

  8. Lead(IV) chloride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lead(IV)_chloride

    Lead tetrachloride can be made by reacting lead(II) chloride PbCl 2, and hydrochloric acid HCl, in the presence of chlorine gas (Cl 2), [5] leading to the formation of chloroplumbic acid H 2 PbCl 6. It is then converted to the ammonium salt (NH 4 ) 2 PbCl 6 by adding ammonium chloride (NH 4 Cl).

  9. Collision-induced dissociation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collision-induced_dissociation

    Collision cell from a Waters Xevo TQ-S triple quadrupole mass spectrometer. Collision-induced dissociation (CID), also known as collisionally activated dissociation (CAD), is a mass spectrometry technique to induce fragmentation of selected ions in the gas phase.