In general, use the following steps for MS problems.
1. Detect the molecular ion (given here as m/z 136)
2. Is the molecular weight (MW; here is 136 daltons) odd or even ?
3. The nitrogen (N) rule states that EVEN number of N (0, 2, 4 , 6, 8 etc) gives EVEN MW
ODD (1, 3, 5, 7, 9 etc) gives ODD MW
4. Inspect the spectrum in the region of the molecular ion, say +/- 10 from mol. ion; are there any relative intensity patterns that are characteristic of the presence of certain elements (due to isotopes) ? Common elements that have a significant % of isotopes include: Boron, Bromine, Chlorine, Copper, Iron, Sulfur, Tin.
5. If so, examine the spectrum very carefully to see if any characteristic isotopic patterns are present at lower m/z values; what mass was lost from the mol. ion to give that lower mass ion ?
6. Construct a table with several columns
1st col. is m/z value, starting with molecular ion at top, of all important ions (even low level intensity) down to low m/z values
2nd col. is mass difference between the molecular ion and the m/z value
3rd col. is elemental formula of the mass difference; a mass diff. of 15 would be -CH3, etc.
7. NOTE not all ions are formed by a sequential loss of relatively small masses going down a chain.
Some quite lower m/z values may also be formed directly from the molecular ion.
8. Combine any masses (e.g. -CH3 or CO etc) to generate the required MW.
I shall expect a report, in triplicate, on my desk(top) by 0900 tomorrow !!!
Good Luck.