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Nest Gen CSI Chemical
Composition Fingerprints
August 7, 2008
Fingerprints can reveal critical
evidence, as well as an identity, with the use of a new technology
developed at Purdue University that detects trace amounts of explosives,
drugs or other materials left behind in the prints.
The new technology also can distinguish between overlapping fingerprints
left by different individuals - a difficult task for current optical
forensic methods.

This image shows two fingerprint
images and a chemical composition graph obtained from a single analysis
using new technology developed at Purdue. The fingerprint in the center
shows an image created from an analysis of the presence of cocaine
molecules. The fingerprint on the left is a computer-generated image
created from the cocaine analysis for use in identification software.
The right figure shows the mass spectrum acquired in one pixel.
A team led by R.
Graham Cooks, Purdue's Henry Bohn Hass Distinguished Professor of
Analytical Chemistry, has created a tool that reads and provides an
image of a fingerprint's chemical signature. The technology can be used
to determine what a person recently handled.
"The classic example of a fingerprint is an ink imprint showing the
unique swirls and loops used for identification, but fingerprints also
leave behind a unique distribution of molecular compounds," Cooks said.
"Some of the residues left behind are from naturally occurring compounds
in the skin and some are from other surfaces or materials a person has
touched."
Demian R. Ifa, a Purdue postdoctoral researcher and the paper's lead
author, said the technology also can easily uncover fingerprints buried
beneath others.
"Because the distribution of compounds found in each fingerprint can be
unique, we also can use this technology to pull one fingerprint out from
beneath layers of other fingerprints," Ifa said. "By looking for
compounds we know to be present in a certain fingerprint, we can
separate it from the others and obtain a crystal clear image of that
fingerprint. The image could then be used with fingerprint recognition
software to identify an individual."
Researchers examined fingerprints in situ or lifted them from different
surfaces such as glass, metal and plastic using common clear plastic
tape. They then analyzed them with a mass spectrometry technique
developed in Cooks' lab.
Mass spectrometry works by first turning molecules into ions, or
electrically charged versions of themselves, so their masses can be
analyzed. Conventional mass spectrometry requires chemical separations,
manipulations of samples and containment in a vacuum chamber for
ionization and analysis. Cooks' technology performs the ionization step
in the air or directly on surfaces outside of the mass spectrometer's
vacuum chamber, making the process much faster and more portable, Ifa
said.
The
Purdue procedure performs the ionization step by spraying a stream of
water in the presence of an electric field to create positively charged
water droplets. Water molecules in the droplets contain an extra proton
and are called ions. When the charged water droplets hit the surface of
the sample being tested, they transfer their extra proton to molecules
in the sample, turning them into ions. The ionized molecules are then
vacuumed into the mass spectrometer to be measured and analyzed.
Researchers placed a section of tape containing a lifted fingerprint on
a moving stage in front of the spectrometer. The spectrometer then
sprayed small sections of the sample with the charged water droplets,
obtaining data for each section and combining the data sets to create an
analysis of the sample as a whole, Ifa said. Software was used to map
the information and create an image of the fingerprint from the
distribution and intensity of selected ions.
The research was performed within Purdue's Center for Analytical
Instrumentation Development located at the Bindley Biosciences Center in
Purdue's Discovery Park.
Cooks' device, called desorption electrospray ionization or DESI, has
been commercialized by Indianapolis-based Prosolia Inc., and the
research was funded by Office of Naval Research and Prosolia. |