Mass Spectrometry Flashcards

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1
Q

What does a mass spectrometer do

A

Separates atoms and molecules according to their mass and shows the relative abundance of dif atoms and molecules present

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2
Q

What state must the sample be in in a mass spectrometer and how is this achieved

A

Must be in gaseous state- done by heating the sample

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3
Q

How is ionisation done

A

Beam of high energy electrons bombards the atoms/molecules of the sample, turns them into ions by knocking off one or more electrons

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4
Q

What is the purpose of the vacuum in mass spectrometers

A

Allows ionised atoms/molecules to be studied without interference from atoms and molecules in the air

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5
Q

What are the positive ions distinguished based on

A

Their mass-to-charge ratio

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6
Q

What is mass to charge ratio

A

Ratio of the relative mass of an ion to its charge(usually charge=1)

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7
Q

How does the deflection method work to separate ions

A

Electric field accelerates ions into a magnetic field which deflects the ions onto the detector. Ions with a greater m/z are deflected by a smaller amount and ions with a smaller m/z are deflected by a greater amount. So lighter and greater charge=deflected more.

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8
Q

How does the time of flight method to separate ions work

A

Accelerates ions and separates them by how long it takes them to reach a detector, indicates their speed and ions with smaller mass will travel faster than those with greater mass

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9
Q

What does a mass spectrometer produce and what do the lines tell us

A

A mass spectrum- height of line tells us relative abundance of that isotope while the x axis tell us mass to charge ratio

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10
Q

Which line of a mass spectrum is the relative mass of the element

A

The line furthest to the right ignoring any very small lines

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11
Q

What is an isotope

A

Atoms of the same element with the same number of protons but a different number of neutrons, means they have the same atomic number but dif mass numbers

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12
Q

Do isotopes have the same chemical and physical properties

A

Same- chemical properties
Different- physical properties

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13
Q

Relative isotopic mass

A

The mass of one atom of an isotope relative to 1/12 of the mass of an atom of the isotope carbon-12

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14
Q

Relative atomic mass

A

Average mass of an atom of an element relative to 1/12 the mass of an atom of the isotope carbon-12

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15
Q

Difference between relative isotopic and atomic mass

A

Isotopic is the relative mass of individual isotopes while atomic is the relative mass of atoms in an element(often contains mixture of isotopes)

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16
Q

Relative molecular mass(Mr)

A

Sum of the relative atomic masses of all the atoms in its molecular formula of an element/compound

17
Q

Relative formula mass(Mr)

A

Of a compound is the sum of relative atomic masses of all the atoms in its formula

18
Q

Why do isotopes have similar chemical properties

A

Have same number of valence electrons and electronic configuration which are involved in bonding