A fingerprinting technique, which lifts chemical residue as well as the
print, could reveal the gender and diet of a suspect and show if they have had
contact with other substances, such as gunshot residue, explosives, narcotics or
biological agents.
Details of the technique, developed by a team of researchers at
Imperial College London’s Department
of Chemical Engineering, led by Professor Sergei Kazarian, have been published
in the latest edition of the
Analytical Chemistry
journal.
Chemical residues contain a few millionths of a gram of fluid and can be
found on all fingerprints. Conventional fingerprinting techniques often distort
or destroy this chemical information, but Imperial's scientists found that
commercial gelatine-based tape provides a simple method for collection and
transportation of prints for chemical imaging analysis.
Once lifted, the prints are analysed in a spectroscopic microscope. The
sample is irradiated with infra-red rays to identify individual molecules within
the print to give a detailed chemical composition.
The information is then processed by an infra-red array detector, originally
developed by the US military in smart missile technology. The array detector
chemically maps the residue. This process builds up a picture, or chemical
photograph.
"The combined operational advantages and benefits for forensic scientists of
tape lifting prints and spectroscopic imaging really maximises the amount of
information one can obtain from fingerprints,” said Professor Kazarian. "Our
trials show that this technique could play a significant role in the fight
against crime."
Furthermore, by observing the composition of chemicals present in a print,
forensic scientists could also determine the age of a crime scene from which
prints were lifted.
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