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1.
Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom ; 37(2): e9422, 2023 Jan 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36278930

ABSTRACT

RATIONALE: Small amounts of biofluid samples are frequently found at crime scenes; however, existing gold standard methods such as LC-MS frequently require destructive extraction of the sample before a time-consuming analysis which puts strain on forensic analysis providers and can preclude further sample analysis. This study presents the application of sheath-flow probe electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (sfPESI-MS) to the direct analysis of drug metabolites in dried blood spots (DBS) as a high throughput, minimally destructive alternative. METHODS: A rapid direct analysis method using a sfPESI ionisation source coupled to an Orbitrap Exactive mass spectrometer was applied to detect cocaine metabolites (benzoylecgonine, BZE, cocaethylene, CE, and ecgonine methyl ester, EME) from DBS. An optimisation study exploring the use of different chemical modifiers (formic acid and sodium acetate) in the sfPESI probe extraction solvent was conducted to enhance the sensitivity and reproducibility of the sfPESI-MS method. RESULTS: Optimisation of the extraction solvent significantly enhanced the sensitivity and reproducibility of the sfPESI-MS method. A quantitative response over a five-point calibration range 0.5 to 10 µg/ml was obtained for BZE (R2 = 0.9979) and CE (R2 = 0.9948). Limits of detection (LOD) of 1.31, 0.29 and 0.15 µg/ml were achieved for EME, BZE and CE, respectively, from 48 h aged DBSs with % RSD (relative standard deviation) across the calibration range ranging between 19%-28% for [BZE + H]+ , 13%-21% for [CE + H]+ and 12%-29% for [EME + H]+ . CONCLUSIONS: A rapid (< 20 s) quantitative method for the direct analysis of cocaine metabolites from DBS which requires no prior sample preparation was developed. Although the LOD achieved for BZE (LOD: 0.29 µg/ml) was above the UK threshold limit of exposure for drug driving (0.05 µg/ml), the method may be suitable for use in identifying overdose in forensic analysis.


Subject(s)
Cocaine , Tandem Mass Spectrometry , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/methods , Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization , Reproducibility of Results , Cocaine/analysis , Chromatography, Liquid/methods , Limit of Detection
2.
Molecules ; 28(18)2023 Sep 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37764309

ABSTRACT

The identification and recovery of suspected human biofluid evidence can present a bottleneck in the crime scene investigation workflow. Crime Scene Investigators typically deploy one of a number of presumptive enhancement reagents, depending on what they perceive an analyte to be; the selection of this reagent is largely based on the context of suspected evidence and their professional experience. Positively identified samples are then recovered to a forensic laboratory where confirmatory testing is carried out by large lab-based instruments, such as through mass-spectrometry-based techniques. This work proposes a proof-of-concept study into the use of a small, robust and portable ion mobility spectrometry device that can analyse samples in situ, detecting, identifying and discriminating commonly encountered body fluids from interferences. This analysis exploits the detection and identification of characteristic volatile organic compounds generated by gentle heating, at ambient temperature and pressure, and categorises samples using machine learning, providing investigators with instant identification. The device is shown to be capable of producing characteristic mobility spectra using a dual micro disc pump configuration which separates blood and urine from three visually similar interferences using an unsupervised PCA model with no misclassified samples. The device has the potential to reduce the need for potentially contaminating and destructive presumptive tests, and address the bottleneck created by the time-consuming and laborious detection, recovery and analysis workflow currently employed.


Subject(s)
Body Fluids , Coloring Agents , Humans , Pilot Projects , Ion Mobility Spectrometry , Staining and Labeling
3.
Sci Justice ; 59(2): 138-144, 2019 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30798860

ABSTRACT

Forensic practitioners are recommended to dark adapt their eyes prior to conducting evidential searches in the dark. The dark adaptation process remains poorly standardised across the discipline, with little quantified regarding the benefits of such preparative steps. Herein, we report the findings of a study that recruited 50 participants to assess the effectiveness of the Crime-lite Eye™, a darkness adaptation device developed to assist forensic practitioners both in the laboratory and in field. Participants were tasked with searching for the fluorescent signatures left by reaction of 1,8-diazafluoren-9-one (DFO) with amino acids, in a manner akin to the fluorogenic fingerprint treatment of porous evidence. Using an Epson Stylus Photo R265 inkjet printer, ink cartridges were filled with alanine solutions of various concentrations, allowing different motifs to be printed onto copy paper and subsequently developed using DFO. Participants searched for this 'evidence' both with and without dark adapted vision. On average, participants were able to locate and correctly recognise 16% more evidence once dark adapted using the Crime-lite Eye™. The increase in evidence located by participants once dark adapted suggests that crime scene officers should be dark adapting in order to visualise as much as possible. The time taken to dark adapt, 10 min on average during this study, is not excessively long, and should not significantly slow the investigation.


Subject(s)
Dark Adaptation , Fluorescence , Forensic Sciences/instrumentation , Forensic Sciences/methods , Vision, Ocular , Adult , Alanine/chemistry , Aza Compounds/chemistry , Female , Humans , Male , Printing, Three-Dimensional
4.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 18(37): 26284-26290, 2016 Sep 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27711759

ABSTRACT

Computational modelling techniques have been employed to investigate defects and ionic conductivity in Cd2GeO4. We show due to highly unfavourable intrinsic defect formation energies the ionic conducting ability of pristine Cd2GeO4 is extremely limited. The modelling results suggest trivalent doping on the Cd site as a viable means of promoting the formation of the oxygen interstitial defects. However, the defect cluster calculations for the first time explicitly suggest a strong association of the oxide defects to the dopant cations and tetrahedral units. Defect clustering is a complicated phenomenon and therefore not trivial to assess. In this study the trapping energies are explicitly quantified. The trends are further confirmed by molecular dynamic simulations. Despite this, the calculated diffusion coefficients do suggest an enhanced oxide ion mobility in the doped system compared to the pristine Cd2GeO4.

6.
Drug Test Anal ; 2024 Apr 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38589994

ABSTRACT

Latent fingerprints at crime scenes are frequently recovered using forensic gel-lifters, which can help to preserve the crime scene and to enhance visualisation of traces such as blood or paint. In addition to providing fingerprint ridge detail, additional chemical information can also be recovered from gel lifts that may prove pertinent to an investigation. However, while DNA and metal ions have been shown to be able to be detected in gel-lifted fingerprints, the determination of other types of chemical information such as the presence of drugs in gel-lifted prints has not been previously shown. This study demonstrates the application of an ambient ionisation method, sheath flow probe electrospray ionisation-mass spectrometry (sfPESI-MS), to the direct analysis of gel-lifted fingerprints. A model drug compound (zolpidem) is successfully detected from gel-lifted prints from three different surface types: glass, metal, and paper. The surface activity-based separation associated with probe electrospray approaches is shown to resolve zolpidem ions from background phthalate species, significantly enhancing the response obtained from the gel-lifter. A depletion series experiment shows that the drug residue can be detected with up to 100% efficiency after eight consecutive contacts; however, detection efficiency drops to 20% after 30 contacts. The developed approach has potential application to analysis of historical gel-lifters to obtain additional chemical information.

7.
Sci Rep ; 12(1): 12469, 2022 07 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35864148

ABSTRACT

While traditional techniques have long allowed forensic investigators to positively identify fingermarks on documents of interest, understanding the chronological sequence of events that led to their deposition is still seen as a 'holy grail' for forensic examinations. By way of example, the question of whether a mark is above or below printed text is crucial. The work herein reveals that a novel application of a recently established fingermark development technique readily allows such differentiation. The process in question allies forensic gelatin lifters with RECOVER, a development system that hinges on the polymerisation of disulfur dinitride. While the latter was specifically developed in its current form for the retrieval of prints from metal surfaces exposed to extreme conditions or washing, its ability to target surface effects allows for visualisation of surface interactions on forensic gelatin lifts. Crucially, in doing so the order in which the lifted material was originally deposited is also revealed. This, therefore, permits clear elucidation of the order of deposition of printed text and fingermarks-and does so both rapidly and in a non-invasive way. This long sought-after capability has the potential to revolutionise forensic document examinations.


Subject(s)
Dermatoglyphics , Ink , Forensic Medicine/methods , Gelatin , Metals
8.
Chem Sci ; 10(4): 1064-1069, 2019 Jan 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30774902

ABSTRACT

The ability to achieve rapid, in situ identification and age estimation of human bodily fluids can provide valuable information during the investigation of a crime. A novel direct analysis method now permits the rapid in situ identification and age estimation of human bodily fluids for forensic analysis at crime scenes. A thermal desorption surface sampling probe was developed and coupled with a compact mass spectrometer for the direct analysis of volatile organic compound (VOC) profiles of human bodily fluids within two months and in different environmental conditions, without the need for prior sample preparation. The method is not only capable of identifying bodily fluids and discriminating against common interferent species, but also differentiating between bodily fluid stains of different ages over a time period of two months. This demonstrates the potential for rapid in situ identification and age estimation of bodily fluids without the need for contaminative presumptive tests or time-consuming sample preparation.

9.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; (46): 6111-3, 2008 Dec 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19082089

ABSTRACT

Exposure of fingerprints to S(2)N(2) vapour results in the prints being visually imaged by polymeric (SN)(x) on an unprecedented range of media; in addition, the polymer forms in response to the interaction of S(2)N(2) with traces of inkjet inks, for example the minute amounts left by the contact between printed paper and an envelope.


Subject(s)
Ink , Nitriles/chemistry , Sulfur Compounds/chemistry , Spectrum Analysis, Raman
10.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; (45): 4812-4, 2007 Dec 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18004450

ABSTRACT

Reaction of S(2)N(2) vapour with Na-ZSM-5 results in rapid polymerisation and inclusion of the resulting (SN)(x) within the zeolite channels.

11.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; (29): 3054-6, 2007 Aug 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17639139

ABSTRACT

Reaction of [Bu(4)N](2)[Pd(2)Br(6)(Se(2)N(2))] with [14]aneS(4) results in eventual formation of Se(4)N(4); intermediates in this reaction include an air-sensitive insoluble material which reacts with [PtCl(2)(PMe(2)Ph)](2) to give the first example of a platinum adduct of Se(2)N(2) and with [Pd(2)Br(6)](2-) to regenerate the starting material.

12.
Forensic Sci Int ; 266: e86-e92, 2016 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27342344

ABSTRACT

The UK's recent move to polymer banknotes has seen some of the currently used fingermark enhancement techniques for currency potentially become redundant, due to the surface characteristics of the polymer substrates. Possessing a non-porous surface with some semi-porous properties, alternate processes are required for polymer banknotes. This preliminary investigation explored the recovery of fingermarks from polymer notes via vacuum metal deposition using elemental copper. The study successfully demonstrated that fresh latent fingermarks, from an individual donor, could be clearly developed and imaged in the near infrared. By varying the deposition thickness of the copper, the contrast between the fingermark minutiae and the substrate could be readily optimised. Where the deposition thickness was thin enough to be visually indistinguishable, forensic gelatin lifters could be used to lift the fingermarks. These lifts could then be treated with rubeanic acid to produce a visually distinguishable mark. The technique has shown enough promise that it could be effectively utilised on other semi- and non-porous substrates.


Subject(s)
Copper , Dermatoglyphics , Paper , Volatilization , Humans , Light , Polymers , Thioamides
13.
Eur J Mass Spectrom (Chichester) ; 21(3): 265-74, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26307706

ABSTRACT

The complexation of triacetone triperoxide (TATP) with a range of alkali metals has been studied by electrospray ionisation-mass spectrometry yield [M+Cat](+) ions for all of the alkali metals. The formation of [2TATP+Li+LiX](+) (X = Br, Cl) sandwich complexes was also observed. Collision cross- sections for the lithium-containing complexes of TATP were measured by travelling wave ion mobility spectrometry mass spectrometry, and compared well with computationally determined structures. Extractive electrospray ionisation (EESI) using a lithium doped electrospray is demonstrated for the detection of TATP vapours desorbed from a metal surface. The limit of detection for EESI was shown to be 20 ng using the [TATP+Li](+) ion.

14.
Forensic Sci Int ; 217(1-3): e27-30, 2012 Apr 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22075095

ABSTRACT

Faded, or actively removed text on thermally printed paper samples may be enhanced and retrieved through the use of a simple iodine fuming procedure. The recovery of printed documentation evidence in this fashion is neither affected by prior fingerprint enhancement techniques (such as ninhydrin or DFO), nor by sample age. This method allows, for the first time, evidence to be obtained from completely faded thermal paper samples (receipts, for example) as well as allowing deliberately removed printed text (a consequence of solvent washing pre-treatment in latent fingerprint enhancement procedures) to be recovered.

15.
Dalton Trans ; 39(22): 5216-8, 2010 Jun 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20405074

ABSTRACT

New selenoether functionalised tertiary phosphines, based on aryl (2a, 2b) or alkyl (4) backbones, have been synthesised and characterised. P,Se-chelation has been achieved upon complexation to square-planar Pt(II) (3a) or Pd(II) (3b) metal centres. For 3a and 3b, weak non-covalent M...Se contacts were established using single crystal X-ray crystallography.

16.
Dalton Trans ; (37): 5076-82, 2008 Oct 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18802623

ABSTRACT

Reaction of the mixed thioether/ether crowns [9]aneO2S , [12]aneO3S and [18]aneO4S2 with one mol. equivalent of the aminating agent MSH (o-mesitylsulfonylhydroxylamine) in Et2O results in the formation of the mono-sulfimidated systems {[9]aneO2(S=NH2)}+, {[12]aneO3(S=NH2)}+ and {[18]aneO4S(S=NH2)}+, while using two mol. equivalents of MSH with gives the disulfimidium cation {[18]aneO4(S=NH2)2}2+. All of these species have been isolated in good yields as the [mesSO3]- (mes=2,4,6-Me3C6H2) salts and can be readily converted to the [BPh4]- salts by metathesis with Na[BPh4]. Treatment of or with lithium diisopropylamide (LDA) and N-bromosuccinimide (NBS) at -78 degrees C, followed by addition of a further equivalent of the parent thia/oxa crown, gives monocationic N-bridged sulfimide bicyclic compounds ( and respectively), in which the crowns are linked by the sulfimidic nitrogen. Reaction of with LDA and NBS leads to formation of the {([18]aneO4S2)N}+ cation which exhibits an intramolecular S-N-S bridge. Crystallographic studies on representative examples of each compound type are described, together with their spectroscopic properties.

17.
Dalton Trans ; (29): 3798-800, 2008 Aug 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18629400

ABSTRACT

Reaction of o-mesitylsulfonylhydroxylamine (MSH) with Ph(2)Se results in the [Ph(2)SeNH(2)](+) cation; low temperature deprotonation (LDA), bromination (NBS) and then treatment with Ph(2)Se-Na[BPh(4)] generates [Ph(2)SeNSePh(2)][BPh(4)], via the selenimides Ph(2)Se=NH and Ph(2)Se=NBr.

18.
Dalton Trans ; (17): 1665-7, 2007 May 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17443257

ABSTRACT

Reaction of [18]aneO(5)S with the aminating agent MSH results in the {[18]aneO(5)SNH(2)}+ cation which may be converted through to the linked crown system [({[18]aneO(5)S}(2)N)]+ via deprotonation, bromination and reaction with the parent crown; significantly, despite their positive charge, both systems can coordinate sodium cations to the ether linkages.

19.
Dalton Trans ; (8): 1354-6, 2005 Apr 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15824771

ABSTRACT

Imino(triphenyl)phosphorane, Ph3P=NH (1), reacts with nitrile complexes of Pt(IV) to generate hydrolytically sensitive [PtCl4{NH=C(R)N=PPh3}2](R=Me 2a, Et 2b, Ph 2c), and with the Pt(II) complex [PtCl2(EtCN)2] to give [PtCl2(EtCN){NH=C(Et)N=PPh3}](3) and [PtCl2{NH=C(Et)N=PPh3}2](4); X-ray crystallography performed upon (2b) and (3) confirms the presence of an imine/nitrile addition ligand bound by the terminal nitrogen.

20.
Dalton Trans ; (19): 3140-2, 2005 Oct 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16172635

ABSTRACT

The N-bromosulfimide Ph(2)S=NBr reacts with a range of selenium sources including, uniquely, elemental selenium itself, to generate the explosive nitride Se(4)N(4).

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