Overcoming obstacles: Analysis of blood and semen stains washed with different chemicals with ATR-FTIR

Blood and semen stains are the most common biological stains encountered at crime scenes. The washing of biological stains is a common application that perpetrators use to spoil the crime scene. With a structured experiment approach, this study aims to investigate the effects of washing with various...

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Veröffentlicht in:Forensic science international 2023-03, Vol.344, p.111607-111607, Article 111607
Hauptverfasser: YILDIRIM, Mahmut Şerif, AKÇAN, Ramazan, ARAS, Sümer, TAMER, Uğur, EVRAN, Eylül, TAŞTEKİN, Burak, AYDOGAN, Canberk, BOYACI, İsmail Hakkı
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Blood and semen stains are the most common biological stains encountered at crime scenes. The washing of biological stains is a common application that perpetrators use to spoil the crime scene. With a structured experiment approach, this study aims to investigate the effects of washing with various chemicals on the ATR-FTIR detection of blood and semen stains on cotton. On cotton pieces, a total of 78 blood and 78 semen stains were applied, and each group of six stains was immersed or mechanically cleaned in water, 40% methanol, 5% sodium hypochlorite solution, 5% hypochlorous acid solution, 5 g/L soap dissolved pure water, and 5 g/L dishwashing detergent dissolved water. ATR-FTIR spectra gathered from all stains and analyzed with chemometric tools. According to performance parameters of developed models, PLS-DA is a powerful tool for discrimination of washing chemical for both washed blood and semen stains. Results from this study show that FTIR is promising for use in detecting blood and semen stains that have become invisible to the naked eye due to washing of the findings. Our approach allows blood and semen to be detected on cotton pieces using FTIR combined with chemometrics, even though it is not visible to the naked eye. Washing chemicals also can be distinguished via FTIR spectra of stains. [Display omitted] •Blood and semen stains can be discriminated based on FTIR spectra with PLS-DA.•Washed blood and semen stains can be identified via FTIR.•Washing chemicals can be discriminated based on FTIR spectra of biological stains with PLS-DA.
ISSN:0379-0738
1872-6283
DOI:10.1016/j.forsciint.2023.111607