I have a question on MS. Why isn't the molecular ion (parent ion) sometimes not observed in the mass spectrum? Does it have anything to do with the isotopes?
To try to dispel any confusion,
the ionization technique is not relevant---the "molecular ion" will not be observed if the amount of energy deposited in the molecule is sufficiently high. With electron impact (EI), electrons at 70eV are typically used; this is well above the typical ~10 eV ionization potential of the average organic compound, and the ion then fragments to give the standard (EI) spectrum seen in MS data system libraries. On older EI systems in the 1980's there was the option to manually adjust downwards the eV, which I sometimes dropped to 20-30 eV to observe the molecular ion. Even the so-called "soft" ionization techniques (CI, ESI, FAB, MALDI etc), which deposit much less energy, can produce losses of small neutrals (H2O, NH3, HCl etc) or loss of large chunks if the energetics are right. Large molecules have more degrees of freedom over which to distribute the excess energy, and their mol. ions are generally more stable.
The presence of isotopes (13C, 2H, 15N, 37Cl etc) has absolutely NO bearing on the above discussion.