Note:
This awardee has received supplemental funding. This award detail page includes information about both the original award and supplemental awards.
Award Information
Description of original award (Fiscal Year 2016, $50,000)
As submitted by the proposer: For over one hundred years, fingerprinting has been a major tool for identification in the criminal justice system. Currently, latent fingerprint identification is limited to visualizing the print and then comparing the ridge patterns against those in the FBI database. Unfortunately, prints are often smudged, distorted, or overlapped with another print. There may be multiple hits from the database if only a partial print is recovered, or no match at all if the subject's prints are not on file. To overcome these limitations, additional revolutionary steps are necessary beyond the mere visualization of fingerprints.
Chemical fingerprinting is a new method to uncover the hidden chemical nature of latent fingerprints. This chemical signature includes external compounds such as drugs or explosives with which the suspect has come into contact, as well as inherent compounds in fingerprints such as lipids or amino acids that might be specific to the suspect's gender, ethnicity, or medical conditions. A plethora of information can be derived from chemical fingerprinting, providing a new avenue in individual identification in addition to the fingerprint database search. Mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) is the most promising method for chemical fingerprinting due to its extremely high sensitivity, label-free detection, and unbiased molecular characterization. In spite of the promise, MSI based chemical fingerprinting is still far from practical use because of a few major bottlenecks: 1) low sensitivity for small molecules, 2) ambiguity of chemical identifications, and 3) lack of robust protocols.
The proposed research is designed to overcome such limitations and advance MSI as a practical tool for routine criminal investigations. Innovative new approaches are proposed that are specifically designed to be compatible with the cu rrent forensic practice as well as to dramatically improve the sensitivity of low mass compounds of forensic interest. The most innovative aspect of the proposed research is the adoption of nanoparticles for forensic use. Various nanoparticles will be screened as a mediator to absorb laser energy and assist in the desorption of fingerprint chemicals. Nanoparticles have no background in the low mass region and provide efficient ionization of many small molecule compounds. Additionally, nanoparticles will be used to visualize latent fingerprints as forensic fingerprint powders in a crime scene. Advanced MSI technology will be developed and applied for chemical fingerprinting, including high-spatial resolution imaging to visualize level 3 finger pore images and multiplex MSI for confident analyte identifications.
Note: This project contains a research and/or development component, as defined in applicable law.
ca/ncf
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