4.3 Article

Toward Surface-Enhanced Raman Imaging of Latent Fingerprints

Journal

JOURNAL OF FORENSIC SCIENCES
Volume 55, Issue 6, Pages 1462-1470

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL PUBLISHING, INC
DOI: 10.1111/j.1556-4029.2010.01484.x

Keywords

forensic science; latent fingerprints; fingerprint degradation; surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy; enhancement factor; dispersible Raman substrates; dielectric core-metal shell nanowires; macro-Raman chemical imaging

Funding

  1. High Temperature Materials Laboratory at Oak Ridge National Lab
  2. National Institute of Justice
  3. Office of Naval Research
  4. Technical Support Working Group

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Exposure to light or heat, or simply a dearth of fingerprint material, renders some latent fingerprints undetectable using conventional methods. We begin to address such elusive fingerprints using detection targeting photo- and thermally stable fingerprint constituents: surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS). SERS can give descriptive vibrational spectra of amino acids, among other robust fingerprint constituents, and good sensitivity can be attained by improving metal-dielectric nanoparticle substrates. With SERS chemical imaging, vibrational bands' intensities recreate a visual of fingerprint topography. The impact of nanoparticle synthesis route, dispersal methodology-deposition solvent, and laser wavelength are discussed, as are data from enhanced vibrational spectra of fingerprint components. SERS and Raman chemical images of fingerprints and realistic contaminants are shown. To our knowledge, this represents the first SERS imaging of fingerprints. In conclusion, this work progresses toward the ultimate goal of vibrationally detecting latent prints that would otherwise remain undetected using traditional development methods.

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