The halogens chlorine and bromine come in pairs of isotopes, a mass of two apart. You can guess what they are from the molar mass:
- chlorine comes as 35Cl and 37Cl, in roughly 3:1 ratio giving M = 35.5 g mol-1
- bromine comes as 79Br and 81Br, in roughly 1:1 ratio giving M = 79.9 g mol-1
These are the only two that you can be expected to know, but you do need to be able to recognise the effect of other isotopes if present. For example, if you were told that one carbon atom was a
13C, rather than the usual
12C, in a sample of butanone, you would need to recognise that the molecular ion would be [
12C
313C
1H
8O]
+ * with m/z = 73 rather than the m/z = 72 you'd get for [
12C
4H
8O]
+ *.
For a compound like dichloroethane, C
2H
4Cl
2, you'd get molecular ions at:
- m/z = 98 from [C2H435Cl2]+ *
- m/z = 100 from [C2H435Cl137Cl1]+ *, and
- m/z = 102 from [C2H437Cl2]+ *
and in roughly 9:6:1 ratio (which you can calculate from a tree diagram using P(
35Cl) = 3/4 and P(
37Cl) = 1/4, so you get P(2 x
35Cl) = 9/16,
P(2 x
37Cl) = 1/16, and P(one of each of
35Cl and
35Cl) = 2 x 3/4 x 1/4 = 6/16).