Stringent Pharmaceutical, Food, and Environmental Regulations and Quality Standards to Offer Transformative Growth
A mass spectrometer (MS) determines atom/molecule mass by measuring the mass-to-charge ratio of its ions. It consists of four basic components: a sample inlet, an ionization source, a mass analyzer, and a detector. It is largely used in University research laboratories and government research institutions; pharmaceutical, biotechnology/biopharmaceutical, life sciences, and contract research organizations; the chemical, oil and gas, polymer, and semiconductor and electronics industries; and in agriculture and food, environmental testing, forensics, healthcare, and clinical analysis applications.
This project examines demand for single quadrupole liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS), tandem quadrupole LC-MS, time of flight (TOF) LC-MS, gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GC-MS), matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization TOF (MALDI-TOF), inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS), and portable mass spectrometry systems. The main objective is to identify growth opportunities in the industry and understand the factors likely to drive or restrain market growth. The study also highlights how market participants are implementing best practices from a sustainability perspective.
Strategic Imperatives
Why is it Increasingly Difficult to Grow?
The Strategic Imperative 8™
The Impact of the Top 3 Strategic Imperatives on the Mass Spectrometry Industry
Growth Opportunities Fuel the Growth Pipeline Engine™
Growth Opportunity Analysis
Scope of Analysis
Mass Spectrometry End Users
Distribution Channels
Growth Drivers and Restraints
Growth Driver Analysis
Growth Restraint Analysis
Key Trends
Key Trends—ICP-MS
Key Trends—GC-MS
UN Sustainable Development Goals and Industry Best Practices