This is a compilation of initialisms and acronyms commonly used in mass spectrometry .[ 1] [ 2]
ADI – Ambient desorption ionization
AE – Appearance energy
AFADESI – Air flow-assisted desorption electrospray ionization
AFAI – Air flow-assisted ionization[ 3]
AFAPA – Aerosol flowing atmospheric-pressure afterglow
AGHIS – All-glass heated inlet system[ 4]
AIRLAB – Ambient infrared laser ablation[ 5]
AMS – Accelerator mass spectrometry
AMS – Aerosol mass spectrometer
AMU – Atomic mass unit
AP – Appearance potential
AP MALDI – Atmospheric pressure matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization
APCI – Atmospheric pressure chemical ionization
API – Atmospheric pressure ionization
APPI – Atmospheric pressure photoionization
ASAP – Atmospheric Sample Analysis Probe
ASMS – American Society for Mass Spectrometry
BP – Base peak
BIRD – Blackbody infrared radiative dissociation[ 6]
CRF – Charge remote fragmentation
CSR – Charge stripping reaction
CI – Chemical ionization
CA – Collisional activation
CAD – Collisionally activated dissociation
CID – Collision-induced dissociation
CRM – Consecutive reaction monitoring
CF-FAB – Continuous flow fast atom bombardment
CRIMS – Chemical reaction interface mass spectrometry[ 7]
CTD – Charge transfer dissociation[ 8]
DE – Delayed extraction
DADI – Direct analysis of daughter ions
DAPPI – Desorption atmospheric pressure photoionization
DEP – Direct exposure probe
DESI – Desorption electrospray ionization
DIOS – Desorption/ionization on silicon[ 9]
DIP – Direct insertion probe
DART – Direct analysis in real time
DLI – Direct liquid introduction
DIA – Data independent acquisition
EA – Electron affinity
EAD – Electron-activated dissociation
ECD – Electron-capture dissociation
ECI – Electron capture ionization
EDD – Electron-detachment dissociation
EI – Electron ionization (or electron impact)
EJMS – European Journal of Mass Spectrometry
ESA – Electrostatic energy analyzer
ES/ESI – Electrospray ionisation
ETD – Electron-transfer dissociation
eV – Electronvolt
FAIMS – High-field asymmetric waveform ion mobility spectrometry
FAB – Fast atom bombardment
FIB – Fast ion bombardment
FD – Field desorption
FFR – Field-free region
FI – Field ionization
FT-ICR MS – Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometer
FTMS – Fourier transform mass spectrometer
GDMS – Glow discharge mass spectrometry
HDX – Hydrogen/deuterium exchange
HCD – Higher-energy C-trap dissociation
ICAT – Isotope-coded affinity tag
ICP – Inductively coupled plasma
ICRMS – Ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometer
IDMS – Isotope dilution mass spectrometry
IJMS – International Journal of Mass Spectrometry
IRMPD – Infrared multiphoton dissociation
IKES – Ion kinetic energy spectrometry
IMS – Ion mobility spectrometry
IMSC – International Mass Spectrometry Conference
IMSF – International Mass Spectrometry Foundation
IRMS – Isotope ratio mass spectrometry
IT – Ion trap
ITMS – Ion trap mass spectrometry
ITMS – Ion trap mobility spectrometry
iTRAQ – Isobaric tag for relative and absolute quantitation
JASMS – Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry
JEOL – Japan Electro-Optics Laboratory
JMS – Journal of Mass Spectrometry
KER – Kinetic energy release
KERD – Kinetic energy release distribution
LCMS – Liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry
LD – Laser desorption
LDI – Laser desorption ionization
LI – Laser ionization
LMMS – Laser microprobe mass spectrometry
LIT – Linear ion trap
LSI – Liquid secondary ionization
LSII – Laserspray ionization inlet
MIKES – Mass-analyzed ion kinetic energy spectrometry
MS – Mass spectrometer
MS – Mass spectrometry
MS2 – Mass spectrometry/mass spectrometry, i.e. tandem mass spectrometry
MS/MS – Mass spectrometry/mass spectrometry, i.e. tandem mass spectrometry
MALDESI – Matrix-assisted laser desorption electrospray ionization
MALDI – Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization
MAII – Matrix-assisted inlet ionization
MAIV – Matrix-assisted ionization vacuum
MIMS – Membrane introduction mass spectrometry, membrane inlet mass spectrometry, membrane interface mass spectrometry
MCP – Microchannel plate
MSn – Multiple-stage mass spectrometry
MCP – Microchannel plate
MPI – Multiphoton ionization
MRM – Multiple reaction monitoring
NEMS-MS – Nanoelectromechanical systems mass spectrometry
NETD – Negative electron-transfer dissociation
NICI – Negative ion chemical ionization
NRMS – Neutralization reionization mass spectrometry
oa-TOF – Orthogonal acceleration time of flight
OMS – Organic Mass Spectrometry (journal)
PDI – Plasma desorption/ionization
PDMS – Plasma desorption mass spectrometry
PAD – Post-acceleration detector
PSD – Post-source decay
PyMS – Pyrolysis mass spectrometry
QUISTOR – Quadrupole ion storage trap
QIT – Quadrupole ion trap
QMS – Quadrupole mass spectrometer
QTOF – Quadrupole time of flight
RCM – Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry
REIMS – Rapid evaporative ionization mass spectrometry
REMPI – Resonance enhanced multiphoton ionization
RGA – Residual gas analyzer
RI – Resonance ionization
SAII – Solvent-assisted ionization inlet
SELDI – Surface-enhanced laser desorption/ionization
SESI – Secondary electrospray ionization
SHRIMP – Sensitive high-resolution ion microprobe
SIFT – Selected ion flow tube
SILAC – Stable isotope labelling by amino acids in cell culture
SIM – Selected ion monitoring
SIMS – Secondary ion mass spectrometry
SIR – Selected ion recording
SNMS – Secondary neutral mass spectrometry
SRM – Selected reaction monitoring
SWIFT – Stored waveform inverse Fourier transform
SID – Surface-induced dissociation
SIR – Surface-induced reaction
SI – Surface ionization
SORI – Sustained off-resonance irradiation
TI – Thermal ionization
TIC – Total ion current
TICC – Total ion current chromatogram
TLF – Time-lag focusing
TMT – Tandem mass tags
TOF-MS – Time-of-flight mass spectrometer
VG – Vacuum Generators (company)
^ Busch, Kenneth L. (February 2002). "SAMS:Speaking with Acronyms in Mass Spectrometry" (PDF) . Spectroscopy . 17 (2). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-04-19. Retrieved 2009-02-02 .
^ Busch, Kenneth L. (May 1, 2006). "Acronyms in Mass Spectrometry" . spectroscopyonline.com . Retrieved September 22, 2015 .
^ He, Jiuming; Tang, Fei; Luo, Zhigang; Chen, Yi; Xu, Jing; Zhang, Ruiping; Wang, Xiaohao; Abliz, Zeper (2011). "Air flow assisted ionization for remote sampling of ambient mass spectrometry and its application". Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry . 25 (7): 843–850. doi :10.1002/rcm.4920 . ISSN 0951-4198 . PMID 21416520 .
^ Peterson, Lowell (1962). "Mass Spectrometer All-Glass Heated Inlet". Analytical Chemistry . 34 (13): 1850–1851. doi :10.1021/ac60193a054 . ISSN 0003-2700 .
^ O’Brien, Jeremy T.; Williams, Evan R.; Holman, Hoi-Ying N. (2015). "Ambient Infrared Laser Ablation Mass Spectrometry (AIRLAB-MS) of Live Plant Tissue with Plume Capture by Continuous Flow Solvent Probe". Analytical Chemistry . 87 (5): 2631–2638. doi :10.1021/ac503383p . ISSN 0003-2700 . PMID 25622206 .
^ Dunbar, Robert C. (2004). "BIRD (blackbody infrared radiative dissociation): Evolution, principles, and applications" . Mass Spectrometry Reviews . 23 (2): 127–58. Bibcode :2004MSRv...23..127D . doi :10.1002/mas.10074 . PMID 14732935 .
^ Abramson, Fred P. (1994). "CRIMS: Chemical reaction interface mass spectrometry". Mass Spectrometry Reviews . 13 (4): 341–356. Bibcode :1994MSRv...13..341A . doi :10.1002/mas.1280130403 .
^ Hoffmann WD, Jackson GP (November 2014). "Charge transfer dissociation (CTD) mass spectrometry of peptide cations using kiloelectronvolt helium cations". Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry . 25 (11): 1939–43. Bibcode :2014JASMS..25.1939H . doi :10.1007/s13361-014-0989-6 . PMID 25231159 .
^ Buriak, Jillian M.; Wei, Jing; Siuzdak, Gary (1999). "Desorption–ionization mass spectrometry on porous silicon". Nature . 399 (6733): 243–6. Bibcode :1999Natur.399..243W . doi :10.1038/20400 . PMID 10353246 .