Nitrogen generators for LC/MS instruments have become an increasingly standard part of laboratory infrastructure as analytical scientists look to eliminate the inconsistencies, interruptions, and ongoing costs associated with delivered cylinder gas.
The Three Roles Nitrogen Plays in an LC/MS System
Understanding why nitrogen matters so much in LC/MS starts with recognising that the gas is not performing a single function — it is doing three distinct jobs simultaneously, each of which is critical.
As the nebuliser gas, nitrogen atomises the liquid sample into charged droplets at the electrospray ionisation source. Insufficient pressure or purity at this stage directly reduces ionisation efficiency, which degrades sensitivity and can compromise detection limits in low-concentration analyses.
As the curtain gas, nitrogen forms a protective barrier at the ion inlet, preventing atmospheric contaminants and solvent vapours from entering the vacuum system. Any breakdown in this barrier introduces noise and can cause progressive damage to sensitive components over time.
As the drying gas, nitrogen removes residual solvent from the droplet cloud before ions reach the mass analyser. Moisture and hydrocarbon contamination at this stage causes signal suppression — one of the more frustrating sources of analytical error because it can be difficult to identify and often manifests as inconsistent results rather than obvious instrument failure.
Most nitrogen generator for LC/MS instruments require nitrogen at between 95 and 99.5 percent purity, with flow rates typically ranging from 10 to 35 litres per minute depending on the platform. High-resolution instruments such as triple-quadrupole and Orbitrap systems tend to demand the higher end of both parameters.
On-Site Generation vs. Cylinders
The case for on-site nitrogen generation in an LC/MS laboratory comes down to three practical advantages. First, running costs are significantly lower once the initial capital investment is recovered — there are no cylinder rental fees, no delivery surcharges, and no emergency orders when a tank runs dry mid-analysis. Second, the supply is uninterrupted — a PSA generator produces nitrogen continuously and on demand, meaning the instrument never has to stop because gas ran out. Third, purity is consistent — unlike cylinders where purity can vary between deliveries or decline as the tank empties, a well-maintained generator delivers stable, dry nitrogen at a fixed purity level throughout its service life.
For laboratories running high-throughput analysis or instruments that operate continuously, these advantages compound quickly and the return on investment tends to be realised within the first year or two of operation.







