The use of color tests for the presumptive identification of illicit substances has been an important tool used by law enforcement to establish probable cause for decades. Recently, however, color tests have received negative media attention due to their inconsistent and subjective results that can sometimes lead to wrongful arrests. Although they have been fairly effective in testing common drugs, current color tests cannot combat the constant influx of novel psychoactive substances due to their failure to clearly distinguish similarly structured compounds from one another. Common commercially available color tests can yield false positives for cocaine when testing diphenhydramine, indistinguishable results between cocaine and phencyclidine (PCP), and cannot easily detect benzylpiperazine (BZP). Photoluminescent organometallic clusters formed with copper(I) iodide (CuI) and cyclic amines have been investigated for around 40 years, but with no known application toward forensic science. The current project shows the practical implementation of copper(I) iodide to detect and identify various substances of forensic interest by photoluminescence spectral analysis of the resulting organometallic clusters. This novel method provides an innovative route for the presumptive identification of BZP, cocaine, PCP, fentanyl, opiates, piperazine-based designer drugs, and other heterocyclic alkaloids. (publisher abstract modified)
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Assessing the Fit Between U.S. Sponsored Training and the Needs of Ukrainian Police Agencies
- A Low-Cost, Simplified Platform of Interchangeable, Ambient Ionization Sources for Rapid, Forensic Evidence Screening on Portable Mass Spectrometric Instrumentation
- Predicting the Origin of Stains From Next Generation Sequencing mRNA Data