Skip to main content
Article
Photoluminescent Semiconductor Nanocrystals for Fingerprint Detection
Journal of Forensic Sciences (2000)
  • E Roland Menzel
  • Kwan H Cheng, Texas Tech University
  • Mark R Sudduth
  • Russell H Murdock
  • Sydney J Ulvick
  • Steve M Savoy
Abstract

The concept of utilizing photoluminescent semiconductor nanocrystals for latent fingerprint detection, especially in concert with phase-resolved imaging for background fluorescence suppression, is reduced to practice with CdS nanocrystals that are capped with dioctyl sulfosuccinate. The nanocrystals are dissolved in heptane or hexane and are applied in much the same way as staining with fluorescent dye, on articles that have been pre-fumed with cyanoacrylate ester and also on the sticky side of electrical tape without pre-fuming. Since CdS can form a photoluminescent nanocomposite with dendrimers, a feasibility examination of dendrimer tagging of fingerprints has also been conducted.

Keywords
  • Cadmium sulfide,
  • Dendrimer,
  • Fingerprints,
  • Forensic science,
  • Nanoparticle,
  • Phase-resolved imaging,
  • Photoluminescence,
  • Quantum dot,
  • Semiconductor nanocrysta,
  • Time-resolved imaging
Publication Date
May, 2000
Citation Information
Menzel, E. R., Cheng, K. H., Sudduth, M. R., Murdock, R. H., Ulvick, S. J., & Savoy, S. M. (2000). Photoluminescent semiconductor nanocrystals for fingerprint detection. Journal of Forensic Sciences, 45, 545-551. doi: 10.1520/JFS14727J