Infrared multiple photon dissociation (IRMPD) spectroscopic and theoretical studies of protonated homodimers of amino acids generated by electrospray ionization in the gas phase have been reviewed.Results show that proton affinity (PA) may be applied as a probe to predict their structural type: salt-bridged or charge-solvated. Proline can be viewed as a reference. For an amino acid with a PA value higher than that of proline, the most stable conformation of its protonated homodimer tends to prefer salt-bridged conformation; otherwise, charge-solvated conformation is expected to be the most stable. However, side chain effects may cause the inaccuracy in structural determination due to the strong interactions with the charge, which makes the charge-solvated structure more stable even for species with high PA values. Temperature effect on distribution of different isomers is also very important. In lots of cases, the coexistence of multiple isomers is general, which makes the explanation of an overall IRMPD spectrum difficult. So a statistical view on the distribution of optimized isomers is very helpful.