Analysis of Residues
Jan 15, 2016
Analysis of Residues
Laboratory Analysis of Debris andOther Samples
1. Preparation of Liquid Samples:• Liquid samples are simply drawn into a special syringe and
injected into a gas chromatograph (GC)2. Preparation of Fire Debris samples:• There are four commonly used
methods to separate or concentrate any ignitable liquids from fire debris samples: heated headspace, steam distillation, carbon strip or tube absorption, and solvent wash
Laboratory Analysis of Debris andOther Samples
i. Heated Headspace:• The paint can containing the fire debris is punctured with a
nail, the hole covered with tape, and the can incubated for 1+ hours at 70-80 °C
• After removing the can from the oven, the headspace vapor is quickly sampled with a gas-tight syringe and immediately injected into a GC
• Advantages: simple with minimal handling• Disadvantages: not for trace amounts of ignitable liquid
residues
Laboratory Analysis of Debris andOther Samples
ii. Steam Distillation:• Debris is placed into a flask and either water or ethylene
glycol added• The flask is attached to a distillation apparatus and brought to
a boil• The condensate is collected, and if any ignitable fluids are
present, it will separate into a second discernible liquid phase• Disadvantages: time-consuming and risk of contamination
Laboratory Analysis of Debris andOther Samples
iii. Carbon Strip or Tube Absorption:• Uses activated carbon to absorb hydrocarbon vapors• A strip is suspended above the debris & the can is heated to
vaporize the residues• Hydrocarbons are removed from the strip by a solvent wash,
which can be analyzed directly by GC
• A very sensitive technique
Laboratory Analysis of Debris andOther Samples
iv. Solvent Wash:• Fire debris is placed into a flask, solvent added, mixed and
allowed to sit for a period of time• The solvent is separated from the debris, then analyzed as
with the other approaches• Works best for high boiling point ignitable liquids that cannot
be easily vaporized
Laboratory Analysis of Debris andOther Samples
3. Laboratory Examination of Prepared Samples:• Gas chromatography separates mixtures of compounds by a
partitioning process between a mobile and a stationary phase• Ignitable fluids such
as gasoline produce a very complex pattern of peaks
Laboratory Analysis of Debris andOther Samples
• Different ignitable liquids will produce very different GC patterns
• A library of patterns is obtained from known standards of all possible accelerants
• With fire debris samples, many of the most volatile components tend to be lost
• The GC chromatograms can be compared to give an indication of the type of accelerant used, but the GC should not be considered an identification technique
Laboratory Analysis of Debris andOther Samples
• Individual peaks from the GC can be identified using a mass spectrometer (MS)
• As compounds reach the end of the GC column, they pass into the MS
• The MS bombards the compounds with high energy electrons, fragmenting the compounds and yielding a mass spectrum that can be used to identify the compound
Classification of Ignitable Liquids
Laboratory Analysis of Debris andOther Samples
• Comparison specimens are samples of the surface or substratum on which ignitable liquid residues might be present
• Natural and synthetic materials may contain volatile compounds that produce GC peaks when heated or extracted
• Specimens should be collected from unburnt areas of the fire scene