19th century :
1886 ::
Eugen Goldstein observes
canal rays. :
1898 ::
Wilhelm Wien demonstrates that canal rays can be deflected using strong electric and magnetic fields. He shows that the
mass-to-charge ratio of the particles have opposite polarity and is much larger compared to the electron. He also realizes that the particle mass is similar to that of the hydrogen particle. :
1898 ::
J. J. Thomson measures the
mass-to-charge ratio of electrons.
20th century :
1901 ::
Walter Kaufmann uses a mass spectrometer to measure the relativistic mass increase of electrons. :
1905 ::
J. J. Thomson begins his study of positive rays. :
1906 ::Thomson is awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics "in recognition of the great merits of his theoretical and experimental investigations on the conduction of electricity by gases" :
1913 ::Thomson is able to separate particles of different
mass-to-charge ratios. He separates the 20Ne and the 22Ne isotopes, and he correctly identifies the
m/z = 11 signal as a doubly charged 22Ne particle. :
1919 ::
Francis Aston constructs the first velocity focusing mass spectrograph with mass resolving power of 130. :
1922 ::Aston is awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry "for his discovery, by means of his mass spectrograph, of isotopes, in a large number of non-radioactive elements, and for his enunciation of the whole-number rule." :
1931 ::
Ernest O. Lawrence invents the
cyclotron. :
1934 ::
Josef Mattauch and
Richard Herzog develop the double-focusing mass spectrograph. :
1936 ::
Arthur J. Dempster develops the
spark ionization source. :
1937 ::Aston constructs a mass spectrograph with resolving power of 2000. :
1939 ::Lawrence receives the Nobel Prize in Physics for the cyclotron. :
1942 ::Lawrence develops the
Calutron for
uranium isotope separation. :
1943 ::Westinghouse markets its mass spectrometer and proclaims it to be "A New Electronic Method for fast, accurate gas analysis". :
1946 ::William Stephens presents the concept of a
time-of-flight mass spectrometer. :
1953 ::
Wolfgang Paul and Helmut Steinwedel introduce the quadrupole mass filter. :
1954 ::A. J. C. Nicholson (Australia) proposes a hydrogen transfer reaction that will come to be known as the
McLafferty rearrangement. :
1959 ::Researchers at
Dow Chemical interface a
gas chromatograph to a mass spectrometer. :
1964 ::British Mass Spectrometry Society established as first dedicated mass spectrometry society. It holds its first meeting in 1965 in London. :
1966 ::F. H. Field and M. S. B. Munson develop
chemical ionization. :
1968 ::
Malcolm Dole develops electrospray ionization. :
1969 ::H. D. Beckey develops
field desorption. :
1974 ::Comisarow and Marshall develop
Fourier Transform Ion Cyclotron Resonance mass spectrometry. :
1976 ::Ronald MacFarlane and co-workers develop
plasma desorption mass spectrometry. :
1984 ::
John Bennett Fenn and co-workers use
electrospray to ionize biomolecules. :
1985 ::Franz Hillenkamp, Michael Karas and co-workers describe and coin the term
matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI). :
1987 ::
Koichi Tanaka uses the “ultra fine metal plus liquid matrix method” to ionize intact proteins. :
1989 ::
Wolfgang Paul receives the Nobel Prize in Physics "for the development of the ion trap technique". :
1999 ::Alexander Makarov presents the
Orbitrap mass spectrometer.
21st century :
2002 John Bennett Fenn and
Koichi Tanaka are awarded one-quarter of the Nobel Prize in chemistry each "for the development of soft desorption ionisation methods ... for mass spectrometric analyses of biological macromolecules." :
2005 ::Commercialization of Orbitrap MS :
2008 ::
ASMS Distinguished Contribution in Mass Spectrometry Award == See also ==