Plasma-based ambient ionization is based on an
electrical discharge in a flowing gas that produces metastable atoms and molecules and reactive ions. Heat is often used to assist in the desorption of volatile species from the sample. Ions are formed by
chemical ionization in the gas phase. One proposed mechanism involves
Penning ionization of ambient water clusters in a
helium discharge: :He^\ast{} + [(H2O)_\mathit{n}H] ->{} [(H2O)_{\mathit n-1}H]+{} + OH^.{} + e^- . The protonated water clusters can then protonate the sample molecules via :[(H2O)_\mathit{n}H]+{} + M ->{} [M{} + H]+{} + \mathit{n}H2O. For this ionization pathway, the gas-phase
acidity of the protonated water clusters and the gas-phase basicity of the
analyte molecule are of crucial importance. However, since especially smaller protonated water clusters with
n = 1,2,3... exhibit very high gas-phase acidities, even compounds with a rather low gas-phase basicity are readily ionized by proton transfer, yielding [M+H]+ quasimolecular ions. Besides protonated water clusters, other positively charged
reagent ions, such as NO+, O2+, NO2+ and CO2+, may be formed in the afterglow region. These additional reagent ions are capable of ionizing compounds via charge-transfer processes and, thus, offer alternative routes of ionization besides proton transfer, leading to a broader range of suitable analytes. Nevertheless, these ionization mechanisms may also lead to the formation of adducts and oxidation of the original analyte compounds. ==Laser assisted==