Skip to main content
Services for mass spectrometry and proteomic analysis to obtain information on the molecular mass or structure of an organic, inorganic or biological compound by means of a wide range of techniques (Electronic Impact, Chemical Ionisation, Maldi, Electrospray...).

Mass Spectrometry is a micro-analytical technique that requires only a few nanomoles of sample to obtain characteristic information on the structure and molecular mass of the compound to be studied. This is a destructive technique in which the sample is consumed during the analysis. Some form of energy is transferred to the molecule resulting in the ionisation of the molecule in all techniques used for mass spectrometry. In most cases, the molecular ion (ion resulting from the ionisation of the molecule that represents it and is the precursor of all the fragments that make up the mass spectrum) of the sample ‘explodes’ into a variety of fragments (fragmentation pattern). The products formed are gas-phase ions in which their masses and relative abundances make up the mass spectrum.

The contents of this page were updated on 06.19.2024.