Dear James, Have you perhaps generated CS+ ions? Even if the change in ion current at mass 44 is minor, the contribution to mass 46 can be substantial since 34S is 4 percent abundant as compared to 18O at 0.2 percent. CS+ can arise from ionizing COS or CS2 or some ion recombination in the source. Roy Krouse -----Original Message----- From: James Andrew Hall <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask] <[log in to unmask]> Date: Tuesday, September 28, 1999 3:51 AM Subject: sulphur contamination >Dear Group, > I have been investigating stable carbon isotope ratios of >organic contaminants in the sub-surface of a disused manufactured gas >plant. This involves injecting solvent extracts and getting the >mass spectra and d13C ratio. Whenever molecular sulphur is identified on >the quadropole, the 46/44 ratio for the background subtraction on the IRMS >(Isoprime, Micromass) goes off the scale, making automated or manual >correction practically impossible. Has anyone any ideas what is causing >the 46 ion? I can't figure it out. I hope the answer is not too obvious! > Thank you > > James Hall.