Encyclopedia

field-desorption mass spectroscopy

field-desorption mass spectroscopy

[¦fēld dē′sȯrp·shən ¦mas spek′trä·skə·pē]
(spectroscopy)
A technique for analysis of nonvolatile molecules in which a sample is deposited on a thin tungsten wire containing sharp microneedles of carbon on the surface; a voltage is applied to the wire, thus producing high electric-field gradients at the points of the needles, and moderate heating then causes desorption from the surface or molecular ions, which are focused into a mass spectrometer.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
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