Two commercially-available terbium and europium complexes, EuFOD and TbTMHD, provide luminescent visualisation of latent fingermarks placed on nonporous surfaces via sublimation. This is demonstrated using UV radiation from a forensic light source. The method was optimised on metal foil, with other archetypal nonporous surfaces (i.e. glass, ceramic) also suited to this method.
A metastable form of 9‐fluorenone (MS9F) has been characterized using Raman spectroscopy, fluorimetry, and X‐ray diffraction techniques. MS9F emits blue fluorescence (λmax=495 nm) upon 365 nm irradiation and undergoes a single‐crystal‐to‐single‐crystal (SCSC) transformation to reach the ground state form (GS9F) over approximately 30 minutes, whereupon it emits the expected green fluorescence. A structure–property relationship for this fluorescent behavior has been posited. MS9F and GS9F were applied as a means of visualizing latent fingermarks on a nonporous surface. This approach identified three different modes of fluorescent fingermark visualization using 9‐fluorenone.
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