Chemicals and chemical processes in forensic studies-
ISC CHEMISTRY PROJECT
allaboutchemistry.net/chemicals-chemical-processes-forensic-studies-isc-chemistry-project
All About Chemistry July 4, 2020
Chemicals and chemical processes in forensic studies-ISC PROJECT
Chemicals and chemical processes in forensic studies-ISC PROJECT
[Click for ISC CHEMISTRY PRACTICAL]
Introduction:
Forensic science, the application of the methods of the natural and physical sciences to
matters of criminal and civil law. Forensic science can be involved not only in investigation
and prosecution of crimes such as rape, murder, and drug trafficking but also in matters in
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which a crime has not been committed but in which someone is charged with a civil wrong,
such as willful pollution of air or water or causing industrial injuries. Almost any science can
be a forensic science because almost any science can contribute to solving a crime or
evaluating civil harm. In fact, with few exceptions, forensic sciences are no different in what
they study than traditional sciences. The only difference is that forensic scientists apply the
methods and techniques of established sciences to legal matters.
Content:
Forensic chemistry encompasses organic and inorganic analysis, toxicology, arson
investigation, and serology. Each method of analysis uses specialized techniques and
instrumentation. The process may be as simple as setting up a density gradient column to
compare soil samples or as complicated as using a mass spectrometer or neutron activation
analysis to characterize an unknown substance. A wide array of laboratory techniques and
instrumentation is used in forensic studies. This includes ultraviolet, infrared, and visible
spectrophotometry; neutron activation analysis; gas chromatography and mass
spectrophotometry; high-pressure liquid chromatography; and atomic absorption
spectrophotometry.
A) Some important techniques of forensic chemistry:
1. Trace Evidence:
Trace evidence includes materials that are often microscopic in size and are easily transferred
between victims, suspects, clothing articles, vehicles, weapons, tools, and other objects. These
types of materials mainly include paint, hair, fibers, plastics, and adhesives (tape). Also
encountered are fabrics, fabric impressions, cosmetics, gunshot residue particles, and ropes
and cordage. These types of materials which may be found and collected during investigations
are compared to known or reference samples using various chemical, microscopic, and
instrumental techniques. The types of microscopes used include the stereomicroscope, the
compound microscope, the comparison microscope, and the polarized light microscope.
Instruments used include the Fourier Transform Infrared Spectrophotometer (FTIR) and the
microspectrophotometer (MSP). The Forensic Chemistry Section participates in the Paint
Debris Query (PDQ) system, sponsored by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) and
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The PDQ database allows an examiner to process an
automotive paint chip and potentially determine the make, model, and year of a vehicle. The
PDQ database is especially important in difficult cases where investigators do not have a clear
suspect vehicle.
2. Fingerprinting:
Fingerprints on smooth surfaces can often be made visible by the application of light or dark
powder, but fingerprints on checks or other documents are often occult (hidden). Occult
fingerprints are sometimes made visible by the use of ninhydrin, which turns purple due to
reaction with amino acids present in perspiration. Fingerprints or other marks are also
sometimes made visible by exposure to high-powered laser light. Some fingerprints can be
treated with chemical substances, resulting in a pattern that fluoresces when exposed to light
from lasers. Cyanoacrylate ester fumes from glue are used with fluorescent dyes to make the
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fingerprints visible. There’s an older tactic that often comes in very handy in a crime scene.
This tactic also relies on chemistry. It’s the age-old art of dusting for fingerprints. The days of
dusting for prints is not gone, it is still a commonly used tactic for identifying fingerprints.
However, there are also other methods. Some investigators use lasers, which react with the
oils and chemicals that form a fingerprint. There is also work being done to attempt to extract
enough DNA from a single fingerprint to properly identify someone. This would be extremely
helpful, as often fingerprints are very smudged and can not be used to properly identify
someone.
3. Testing for Alcohol:
Accidents caused by intoxicated drivers kill nearly 15,000 persons a year in the United States
alone (almost half of fatal auto accidents are alcohol-related), so a Breathalyzer kit is standard
equipment in most police squad cars or state patrol vehicles. Breathalyzers are used to
estimate the blood alcohol content of drivers suspected of being intoxicated; the driver may
appear sober, but still, have a blood alcohol level above the legal limit. Although it is
impractical to take blood samples on the highway, research has shown that the concentration
of ethanol in the breath bears a definite relationship to its concentration in blood. Many
communities have now set a legal limit of 0.08 percent (meaning that 100 milliliters [3.38
fluid ounces] of blood would contain 0.08 grams [0.0028 ounces] of ethanol). In fact,
authorities now consider that a person’s driving ability is probably impaired at a blood ethanol
level of 0.05 percent. Several types of analytic devices are available to administer Breathalyzer
tests. One test makes use of a portable infrared spectrophotometer, another uses a fuel cell,
and the most common test employs several glass or plastic tubes and some common chemical
reagents. The person being tested blows through a tube, which bubbles the breath through a
solution of chemicals containing sulfuric acid, potassium dichromate, water, and silver nitrate.
Oxidation of the alcohol results in the reduction of dichromate ion to chromic ion, with a
corresponding change in color from orange to green. An electrical device employing a
photocell compares the color of the test solution with a standard solution, giving a quantitative
determination of the alcohol content. The test provides a quick and reproducible
determination of the amount of alcohol in a person’s breath and is a numerical measure of the
amount of alcohol in the bloodstream. The use of a chemical test helps to avoid subjective
opinions of sobriety and provides reliable evidence for court proceedings. The test can be
readily and quickly administered by trained law enforcement personnel, but forensic chemists
test and calibrate the equipment and testify to its accuracy.
4. Serology:
In homicide, sexual assault, aggravated assault, motor vehicle accident, burglary, and other
investigations, the Forensic Chemists routinely conduct serological examinations on clothing
articles, weapons, vehicles, scene samples or other items in order to locate possible
bloodstains, identify the blood by presumptive chemical testing, determine if the blood is of
human origin and then select suitable and relevant samples for DNA analysis. The chemists
also make observations of bloodstain patterns on evidence items and/or at crime scenes.
When evidence is submitted in sexual assault cases, the Forensic Chemists examine the
contents of sexual assault evidence kits, clothing articles, bedding, or other items for the
presence of semen. Possible semen stains are located visually or by an alternate light source
and then tested for a component of seminal fluid by presumptive chemical tests. Further
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testing is conducted microscopically for sperm cells. In the absence of sperm cells, further
testing is carried out for an additional semen component in order to confirm the presence of
seminal fluid. Suitable and relevant samples are then selected for DNA analysis. In some
instances, saliva analysis is also requested. Stains are generally located visually or by the
alternate light sources. Amylase, a chemical component of saliva, is identified to confirm the
presence of saliva. Suitable and relevant samples are then selected for DNA analysis.
5. Bloodstain Pattern Analysis:
Bloodstain pattern analysis involves the examination and documentation of bloodstains,
namely their size, shape, and distribution. Bloodstain patterns are often indicative of the types
of actions that produced or caused these patterns. This information is used to help reconstruct
the sequence of events that occurred during the commission of a crime.
6. Fire Debris Analysis:
The Fire Debris Analysis Unit examines evidence collected at fire scenes and is a part of the
Forensic Chemistry Section of the laboratory. The purpose of this examination is to determine
if an ignitable liquid is present. Most ignitable liquids are petroleum products, however other
non-petroleum products can be identified. Fire debris evidence is packaged in mason jars,
paint cans, or fire debris evidence bags and generally consists of charred fire debris or clothing
items. The examination procedure involves extracting ignitable liquids from the evidence
using one of three extraction techniques or a combination of techniques. The three extraction
methods used by this laboratory are Passive Diffusion Headspace, Simple Headspace, and
Solvent Extraction. The extract is then analyzed on a Gas Chromatograph – Mass
Spectrometer, which provides data that the examiner will then analyze. Based on the pattern,
or appearance of the data, the examiner will identify the type of product, if any, in the extract.
7. Toxicology:
Toxicologists examine a wide range of materials such as bloodstains, urine, and blood gases
for traces of poisons or drugs. Many businesses now require the drug screening of employees;
it is the responsibility of the technician to distinguish between the presence of illegal drugs
and metabolites from foods such as poppy seeds. Such tests may be as simple as paper or thin-
layer chromatography or as complicated as gas chromatographic or electrophoretic and
serological analysis of a blood sample. Following death by an unknown cause, samples of the
victim’s lungs, blood, urine, vitreous humor, and stomach contents are examined for traces of
poisons or medication. Insects found on or near corpses are also collected and examined; they
may actually absorb traces of drugs or poisons from the body, and in fact, traces of poisons
sometimes are found in the surrounding insects long after concentrations in the body have
fallen below detectable limits. Forensic biochemists perform blood typing and enzyme tests on
body fluids in cases involving assault, and also in paternity cases. Even tiny samples of blood,
saliva, or semen may be separated by electrophoresis and subjected to enzymatic analysis. In
the case of rape, traces of semen found on clothing or on the person become important
evidence; the composition of semen varies from person to person. Some individuals excrete
enzymes such as acid phosphatase and other proteins that are seldom found outside seminal
fluid, and these chemical substances are characteristic of their semen samples. The presence of
semen may be shown by the microscopic analysis for the presence of spermatozoa or by a
positive test for prostate-specific antigen. In cases of sexual assault, tiny samples of DNA in
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blood, semen, skin, or hair found on the victim may be purified and the amount of DNA
increased by the use of a polymerase chain reaction to produce quantities large enough to
analyze. Since DNA is as specific to a person as fingerprints, matching the DNA of a
perpetrator to a sample found on a victim is considered to be proof of contact. The Federal
Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is currently in the process of establishing a national Combined
DNA Index System (CODIS) that will collect data from many states and law enforcement
agencies and index it so that particular DNA patterns from evidence collected at many crime
scenes can be compared and matched. Many perpetrators of crimes have been convicted and
many innocent persons set free after years in prison as a result of DNA analysis.
8. Laser Ablation Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry (LA-ICP-
MS) :
When broken glass is involved in a crime, putting together even tiny pieces can be key to
finding important clues like the direction of bullets, the force of impact or the type of weapon
used in a crime. Through its highly sensitive isotopic recognition ability, the LA-ICP-MS
machine breaks glass samples of almost any size down to their atomic structure. Then,
forensic scientists are able to match even the smallest shard of glass found on clothing to a
glass sample from a crime scene. In order to work with this type of equipment in conjunction
with forensic investigation, a Bachelor’s Degree in Forensic Science is usually necessary.
9. Alternative Light Photography :
For a forensic nurse, being able to quickly ascertain how much physical damage a patient has
suffered can be the difference between life and death. Although they have many tools at their
disposal to help make these calls quickly and accurately, Alternative Light Photography is one
of the coolest tools to help see the damage even before it is visible on the skin. A camera such
as the Omnichrome uses blue light and orange filters to clearly show bruising below the skin’s
surface. In order to use this equipment, you would need an MSN in Forensic Nursing.
10. High-Speed Ballistics Photography :
You might not think of it right away as a tool for forensic scientists, but ballistics specialists
often use high-speed cameras in order to understand how bullet holes, gunshot wounds, and
glass shatters are created. Virtually anyone, from a crime scene investigator to a firearms
examiner, can operate a high-speed camera without any additional education or training.
Being able to identify and match bullet trajectories, impact marks and exit wounds must be
done by someone with at least a Bachelor of Science in Forensic Science.
11. Video Spectral Comparator 2000 :
For crime scene investigators and forensic scientists, this is one of the most valuable forensic
technologies available anywhere. With this machine, scientists and investigators can look at a
piece of paper and see obscured or hidden writing, determine the quality of paper and origin
and “lift” indented writing. It is sometimes possible to complete these analyses even after a
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piece of paper has been so damaged by water or fire that it looks unintelligible to the naked
eye. In order to run this equipment, at least a Bachelors degree in Forensic Science or a
Master’s Degree in Document Analysis is usually required.
12. Digital Surveillance For Xbox (XFT Device) :
Most people don’t consider a gaming system a potential place for hiding illicit data, which is
why criminals have come to use them so much. In one of the most ground-breaking forensic
technologies for digital forensic specialists, the XFT is being developed to allow authorities
visual access to hidden files on the Xbox hard drive. The XFT is also set up to record access
sessions to be replayed in real-time during court hearings. In order to be able to access and
interpret this device, a Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Forensics is necessary.
13. 3D Forensic Facial Reconstruction :
Although this forensic technology is not considered the most reliable, it is definitely one of the
most interesting available to forensic pathologists, forensic anthropologists, and forensic
scientists. In this technique, 3D facial reconstruction software takes a real-life human remains
and extrapolates a possible physical appearance. In order to run this type of program, you
should have a Bachelor’s Degree in Forensic Science, a Master’s Degree in Forensic
Anthropology or a Medical Degree with an emphasis on Forensic Examination and Pathology.
14.DNA Sequencer :
Most people are familiar with the importance of DNA testing in the forensic science lab. Still,
most people don’t know exactly what DNA sequencers are and how they may be used. Most
forensic scientists and crime lab technicians use what’s called DNA profiling to identify
criminals and victims using trace evidence like hair or skin samples. In cases where those
samples are highly degraded, however, they often turn to the more powerful DNA sequencer,
which allows them to analyze old bones or teeth to determine the specific ordering of a
person’s DNA nucleobases, and generate a “read” or a unique DNA pattern that can help
identify that person as a possible suspect or criminal.
15. Forensic Carbon-14 Dating :
Carbon dating has long been used to identify the age of unknown remains for anthropological
and archaeological findings. Since the amount of radiocarbon (which is calculated in a Carbon-
14 dating) has increased and decreased to distinct levels over the past 50 years, it is now
possible to use this technique to identify forensic remains using this same tool. The only
people in the forensic science field that have ready access to Carbon-14 Dating equipment are
forensic scientists, usually with a Master’s Degree in Forensic Anthropology or Forensic
Archaeology.
16. Magnetic Fingerprinting and Automated Fingerprint Identification (AFIS) :
With these forensic technologies, crime scene investigators, forensic scientists and police
officers can quickly and easily compare a fingerprint at a crime scene with an extensive virtual
database. In addition, the incorporation of magnetic fingerprinting dust and no-touch
wanding allows investigators to get a perfect impression of fingerprints at a crime scene
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without contamination. While using AFIS requires only an Associates Degree in Law
Enforcement, magnetic fingerprinting usually requires a Bachelor’s Degree in Forensic Science
or Crime Scene Investigation.
17. High-Performance Liquid Chromatography:
High-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) also know as high-pressure liquid
chromatography is an instrumental system based on chromatography that is widely used in
forensic science. The “HP” portion of the acronym is sometimes assigned to the words high
pressure (versus high performance), but it refers to the same analytical system. HPLC is used
in drug analysis, toxicology, explosives analysis, ink analysis, fibers, and plastics to name a few
forensic applications. Like all chromatography, HPLC is based on selective partitioning of the
molecules of interest between two different phases. Here, the mobile phase is a solvent or
solvent mix that flows under high pressure over beads coated with the solid stationary phase.
While traveling through the column, molecules in the sample partition selectively between the
mobile phase and the stationary phase. Those that interact more with the stationary phase will
lag behind those molecules that partition preferentially with the mobile phase. As a result, the
sample introduced at the front of the column will emerge in separate bands (called peaks),
with the bands emerging first being the components that interacted least with the stationary
phase and as a result moved quicker through the column. The components that emerge last
will be the ones that interacted most with the stationary phase and thus moved the slowest
through the column. A detector is placed at the end of the column to identify the components
that elute. Occasionally, the eluting solvent is collected at specific times correlating to specific
components. This provides a pure or nearly pure sample of the component of interest. This
technique is sometimes referred to as preparative chromatography.
18. Gas Chromatography:
Gas chromatography (GC) is an instrumental technique used forensically in drug analysis,
arson, toxicology, and the analyses of other organic compounds. GC exploits the fundamental
properties common to all types of chromatography, separation based on selective partitioning
of compounds between different phases of materials. Here, one phase is inert gas helium (He),
hydrogen (H2), or nitrogen (N2) that is referred to as the mobile phase (or carrier gas), and
the other is a waxy material (called the stationary phase) that is coated on a solid support
material found within the chromatographic column. In older GC systems, the stationary phase
was coated on tiny beads and packed into glass columns with diameters about the same as a
pencil and lengths of 6 to 12 feet, wound into a coil. The heated gas flowed over the beads,
allowing contact between sample molecules in the gaseous mobile phase and the stationary
phase. Called “packed column chromatographs,” these instruments were widely used for drug,
toxicology, and arson analysis. Around the mid-1980s, column chromatography began to give
way to capillary column GC, in which the liquid phase is coated onto the inner walls of a thin
capillary tube (about the diameter of a thin spaghetti noodle) that can be anywhere from 15 to
100 meters long, also wound into a coil. Capillary column chromatography represented a
significant advance in the field and greatly improved the ability of columns to separate the
multiple components found in complex drug and arson samples.
19 . Ion Chromatography:
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Ion chromatography (IC) is an instrumental technique that can be used to detect anions
(negatively charged atoms or molecules such as Cl-) and cations (positively charged species
such as Na+). IC has been applied in forensic science for the analysis of gunshot residue (GSR)
and explosives. The ions of interest include ammonium (NH4+), nitrate (NO3-), and chlorate
(ClO4-), species that are often detected using color change or presumptive tests. The
advantages of IC in these cases include specificity (presumptive tests are subject to false
positives and false negatives) and increased sensitivity, down to the part-per-billion (ppb)
range. A part per billion is 1 microgram (μmg) per liter of water, and a microgram is
1/1,000,000 of a gram.
B) Chemicals used:
Fingerprinting Chemicals
Forensic scientists rely on four primary chemicals to reveal and collect fingerprints: iodine,
cyanoacrylate, silver nitrate and ninhydrin. These chemicals react to substances within the
fingerprint, such as oil and sweat, making the print change color so analysts can see it better.
Forensic scientists usually use iodine and cyanoacrylate — better known under the brand
name Super Glue — by heating them to create fumes. They use silver nitrate and ninhydrin as
a spray or dip. Other chemicals used for fingerprinting are diazafluoren 1, or DFO-1;
rhodamine; ardrox; sudan black; thenoyl europium chelate, or TEC; and acid fushin. These
chemicals help develop fingerprints on more porous surfaces or enhance prints already
produced by other chemicals, by dying and stabilizing the prints.
Blood Evidence
Fluorescein causes a chemical reaction between oxygen and the hemoglobin present in blood.
This chemical is useful for fine blood stains and smears which may appear in different crime
scenes.
Another chemical used for blood evidence is luminol. Like other blood-test chemicals, it reacts
with iron in the blood. Luminol can reveal blood evidence even if someone has tried to clean
the blood up.
The forensic scientist sprays these chemicals on the suspect area and observes the area to see if
fluorescence occurs.
Luminol has limited use in forensic science, in that other chemicals like bleach can produce
the same fluorescence as blood.
Other Agents
Forensic scientists use common chemicals like hydrogen peroxide and alcohol in combination
with the other chemicals at their disposal to produce better test results or speed reaction
times. They also can use these chemicals as disinfectants; for instance, bleach can sterilize
work areas or forensic tools.
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Acknowledgment:
The success and final outcome of this project required a lot of guidance and assistance from
many people and I am extremely privileged to have got this all along the completion of my
project. All that I have done is only due to such supervision and assistance and I would not
forget to thank them.
I respect and thank Mr./Ms. [NAME 1], for providing me an opportunity to do the project
work in [VENUE] and giving us all support and guidance which made me complete the project
duly. I am extremely thankful to [her/him] for providing such a nice support and guidance,
although he had busy schedule managing the corporate affairs.
I owe my deep gratitude to our project guide [NAME 2], who took keen interest on our project
work and guided us all along, till the completion of our project work by providing all the
necessary information for developing a good system.
I would not forget to remember [NAME 3 AND NAME 4], of [COMPANY NAME] for their
encouragement and more over for their timely support and guidance till the completion of our
project work.
I heartily thank our internal project guide, [Name 5], [Position] , [Department] for her/his
guidance and suggestions during this project work.
I am thankful for and fortunate enough to get constant encouragement, support, and guidance
from all Teaching staff of [Department name] which helped us in successfully completing our
project work. Also, I would like to extend our sincere esteems to all staff in the laboratory for
their timely support.
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