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Identification and highly selective differentiation of organic gunshot residues utilizing their elemental and molecular signatures

NCJ Number
307122
Journal
Spectrochimica Acta Part A: Molecular and Biomolecular Spectroscopy Volume: 291 Dated: 15 April 2023
Author(s)
Shelby R. Khandasammy; Lenka Halámková; Matthieu Baudelet; Igor K. Lednev
Date Published
April 2023
Annotation

The authors present a method of identifying organic gunshot residue (OGSR) that allows examiners to use Raman spectroscopy to first identify OGSR particles and then performing LIBS analysis on the recovered particles, which would ensure that the correct samples are being analyzed and that sample material can be preserved and analyzed as needed for evidentiary purposes later.

Abstract

Firearm related evidence is of great significance to forensic science. In recent years, many researchers have focused on exploring the probative value of organic gunshot residue (OGSR) evidence, which is often bolstered by many factors including recoverability. In addition, OGSR analysis has shown the potential to achieve differentiation between OGSRs generated from various ammunition brands and/or calibers. Raman spectroscopy is a vibrational spectroscopic technique which has been used in the past for gunshot residue analysis—including OGSR specifically. Raman spectroscopy is a nondestructive, highly-selective, simple, and rapid technique which provides molecular information about samples. LIBS or Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy is a simple, robust, and rapid analytical method which requires minimal to no sample preparation and a small amount of sample for analysis. LIBS provides information on the elemental compositions of samples. In this study, Raman spectroscopy and LIBS were used together in sequence in an attempt to achieve the specific identification and characterization of OGSR particles from ammunition types which were closely related. The main goal was to determine if this method had the potential to differentiate between various ammunition types of the same caliber and produced by the same manufacturer, and generated under identical firing conditions. High-resolution optical microscopy documented the OGSR particles’ morphologies and Raman spectroscopy was used to identify particles as OGSRs. Finally, LIBS analysis of the OGSR particles was carried out. Advanced chemometric techniques were shown to allow for very successful differentiation between the OGSR samples analyzed. Publisher Abstract Provided