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Forensic Analysis of Laser Printed Ink by X-ray Fluorescence and Laser-Excited Plume Fluorescence

Authors :
Po Chun Chu
Nai Ho Cheung
Bruno Yue Cai
Kelvin Sze-Yin Leung
Ronald Yuen
Yeuk Ki Tsoi
Source :
Analytical Chemistry. 85:4311-4315
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2013.

Abstract

We demonstrated a minimally destructive two-tier approach for multielement forensic analysis of laser-printed ink. The printed document was first screened using a portable-X-ray fluorescence (XRF) probe. If the results were not conclusive, a laser microprobe was then deployed. The laser probe was based on a two-pulse scheme: the first laser pulse ablated a thin layer of the printed ink; the second laser pulse at 193 nm induced multianalytes in the desorbed ink to fluoresce. We analyzed four brands of black toners. The toners were printed on paper in the form of patches or letters or overprinted on another ink. The XRF probe could sort the four brands if the printed letters were larger than font 20. It could not tell the printing sequence in the case of overprints. The laser probe was more discriminatory; it could sort the toner brands and reveal the overprint sequence regardless of font size while the sampled area was not visibly different from neighboring areas even under the microscope. In terms of general analytical performance, the laser probe featured tens of micrometer lateral resolution and tens to hundreds of nm depth resolution and atto-mole mass detection limits. It could handle samples of arbitrary size and shape and was air compatible, and no sample pretreatment was necessary. It will prove useful whenever high-resolution and high sensitivity 3D elemental mapping is required.

Details

ISSN :
15206882 and 00032700
Volume :
85
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Analytical Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....56ffb080716f2bbbeb80a03f7503042f