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The importance of wavelength selection in on-scene identification of drugs of abuse with portable near-infrared spectroscopy

Authors :
Ruben F. Kranenburg
Yannick Weesepoel
Martin Alewijn
Sharon Sap
Peter W.F. Arisz
Annette van Esch
Peter H.J. Keizers
Arian C. van Asten
HIMS Other Research (FNWI)
Analytical Chemistry and Forensic Science (HIMS, FNWI)
Source :
Forensic Chemistry, 30, Forensic Chemistry, 30:100437. Elsevier, Forensic Chemistry 30 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Both the increasing volume and diversity of drugs-of-abuse encountered by investigation services necessitates the need for fast on-scene detectors to detect and identify a broad range of substances. Near-Infrared (NIR) spectroscopy is suitable for presumptive drugs testing by miniaturized sensors implemented in portable devices. Currently, a myriad of different portable NIR spectrometers is available that utilize different wavelength ranges. This study presents a comparison of NIR spectra of frequently occuring drugs analyzed by five different devices. A 350 – 2500 nm range laboratory grade VIS-NIR spectrometer was used to gain insight in spectral ranges diagnostic for substances relevant in forensic science. Obtained spectra were compared to the output of portable spectrometers operating in the 740 – 1070 nm, 950 – 1650 nm, 1550 – 1950 nm and 1300 – 2600 nm range. The results yielded novel insights in the usability of individual spectrometers by visual inspection of NIR spectra as well as comparative statistics with reference substances. For MDMA detection, an instrument capable of detecting a highly abundant and specific peak at 2020 nm is beneficial whereas colored samples are more difficult to detect by lower wavelength range sensors. Relatively pure, lightly colored samples may be correctly characterized by all sensors. These findings may aid NIR spectrometer selection in forensic practice as well as future studies on instrument selectivity or cross-platform calibration transfer.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
24681709
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Forensic Chemistry, 30, Forensic Chemistry, 30:100437. Elsevier, Forensic Chemistry 30 (2022)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....464bc35d8047a12ed0f13f5813f2825d