In previous publications dealing with experimental mass spectrometry of tungsten hexacarbonyl, hexafluoroacetylacetone and its bidentate metal complexes M(hfac) 2 ; M = Cu, Pd the obtained data have been not adequately systematized. In this paper, we analyse the previously published experimental data of the various bond dissociation energy. A modified Yukawa potential, which is the exact solution of the problem dependence the chemical bond energy of its length, is used to analyse the experimental data. Experimental results of the formation of ions can be interpreted only in terms of the formation of fractionally charged quasiparticles. As an experimental technique, mass spectrometry of negative ions in electron resonance capture mode ranks next to the fractional quantum Hall effect in which fractional values of the charge quantization are observed. Also noted the resonance possibility capture of electron with "negative" kinetic energy.The recent reports of Wnorowski et al. [1,2] on investigations of the decay of tungsten hexacarbonyl, W(CO) 6 , using electron ionization (EI)[1] and dissociative electron attachment (DEA)[2] methods were of particular interest to the low-temperature plasma and nanotechnology communities. Furthermore, the dissociative photoionisation of W(CO) 6 was, however, discussed in an earlier paper.[3] It was shown that the bond dissociation of [W(CO) n + ]-CO (n = 0-5) most likely proceeds differently if n < 3 or if n ≥ 3 and that the dissociation occurs from both vibrational excited states or from the electronic-vibrational excited states. The interaction of lowenergy electrons with W(CO) 6 was, however, discussed in a much earlier paper.[4] Our interest here is with the predominantly sequential detachment of a CO ligand from W(CO) 6 , as well as presenting a comparison of the chemical bond dissociation energy BDE(W−CO) as calculated with the EI and DEA processes.In Ref.