Daughter ion: Difference between revisions
From Mass Spec Terms
| No edit summary |  , Replaced: == Related Terms == ‚Üí == See also ==, using AWB | ||
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| ==  | == Orange Book Entry == | ||
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| An electrically charged product of reaction of a particular parent (precursor) ion. In general such ions have a direct relationship with a particular precursor ion and may relate to a unique state of the precursor ion. The reaction need not involve fragmentation, but could, for example involve a change in the number of charges carried. Thus a fragment ion is a daughter ion but not all daughter ions are fragment ions. | An electrically charged product of reaction of a particular parent (precursor) ion. In general such ions have a direct relationship with a particular precursor ion and may relate to a unique state of the precursor ion. The reaction need not involve fragmentation, but could, for example involve a change in the number of charges carried. Thus a fragment ion is a daughter ion but not all daughter ions are fragment ions. | ||
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| ==  | == See also == | ||
| *[[Daughter Ion Scan]] | *[[Daughter Ion Scan]] | ||
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| [[Category:Ions]] | [[Category:Ions]] | ||
| [[Category:Sequential m/z Separation]] | [[Category:Sequential m/z Separation]] | ||
| {{DEFAULTSORT:Daughter Ion}} | |||
Revision as of 14:36, 12 July 2009
| DRAFT DEFINITION | 
| Daughter ion | 
|---|
| This term is not recommended. See product ion. | 
| Considered between 2004 and 2006 but not included in the 2006 PAC submission | 
| This is an unofficial draft definition presented for information and comment. | 
Orange Book Entry
Orange Book
| ORANGE BOOK DEFINITION IUPAC. Analytical Division. Compendium of Analytical Nomenclature (the Orange Book). Definitive Rules, 1979 (see also Orange Book 2023) | 
| Daughter ion | 
|---|
| An electrically charged product of reaction of a particular parent (precursor) ion. In general such ions have a direct relationship with a particular precursor ion and may relate to a unique state of the precursor ion. The reaction need not involve fragmentation, but could, for example involve a change in the number of charges carried. Thus a fragment ion is a daughter ion but not all daughter ions are fragment ions. | 
| IUPAC 1997 Orange Book Chapter 12 | 
| Index of Orange Book Terms | 
