by
lmh » Mon Feb 24, 2020 2:52 pm
Yes, but with risks.
Yes, you can get a signal from the mass spec that is unique to your compound, and quantify this, without separation. However, if you're using electrospray you can get competition between coeluting compounds, where they affect one another's ionization efficiency. If A and B coelute, a large peak of A can reduce the apparent size of B.
Ideally you'd compensate for this by using an internal standard chemically identical to B (i.e. an isotopically labelled version), which will coelute exactly, and be suppressed by A to exactly the same extent. But often internal standards aren't available.
So the answer is yes, but be careful. If you can get better separation, it's a good thing. But if you're working on complex mixtures, you will always get coelutions, even if they're coelutions with components of no interest to you. The problem with MRM methods is that you don't necessarily know what's coeluting, because the MS will only show what you've asked it to show.