Nanoelectromechanical systems mass spectrometer


A nanoelectromechanical systems mass spectrometer is an instrument measuring the mass of analyte particles by detecting the frequency shift caused by the adsorption of the particles on a NEMS resonator.
NEMS-MS was invented by Prof. Michael Roukes and Dr. Kamil Ekinci at the California Institute of Technology in 1999.
First attainment of attogram-scale mass sensitivity was documented in their 2001 patent disclosure. Successive NEMS-MS sensitivity milestones were reported by the Caltech researchers in publications appearing in 2004
and in 2006.

They later developed single molecule analysis in 2009.
Single-biomolecule mass measurements were first accomplished by this team in 2012.
A hybrid NEMS-MS/TOF-MS instrument was reported in 2015.