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Introduction When a gun is fired
some of the hot gas produced by the detonation and ignition of
the cartridge may escape from the side of the weapon. The
gases cool quickly and materials that are solid at normal
temperature condense and are deposited as a particulate
residue on the person who is firing and on surfaces in the
vicinity of the firing point.
The deposits contain the
products of decomposition of the propellant and primer and
also a contribution from the bullet or cartridge
case.
Particles Unique to Gun Shot
Residue (GSR) Pb, Sb, Ba (Lead, Barium and
Antimony) Sb and Ba (Antimony and Barium)
Particles indicative of
GSR Ba,Ca and Si Pb and Sb Pb and Ba Sb
(with S) Sb (without S) Ba Pb
Other particles of
interest include: Mn and Al (Found in lead free
ammunition) Sb and Zn (Found in Sintox explosive)
Various methods of detecting firearms
residue in samples taken from suspects who have fired a gun
have been devised.
Colour
test-indicating presence of particles of lead and
barium
Atomic
Absorption Spectrophotometry (AA)
Neutron
Activity Analyser (NAP)
The later two methods can measure amounts
of lead, barium and antimony but although they are very quick
to perform they lack specificity and this uncertainty can
reduce the value of scientific evidence presented in
court.
SEM/EDX Analysis The technique
employing a Scanning Electron Microscope fitted with an Energy
Dispersive X-ray Analyser has long been accepted. Both
chemical composition and morphology can be ascertained and the
combination is unique to those found in Gun Shot Residue.
Procedure Particles are collected
from the skin and clothing with adhesive tape lift off or by
filter concentration. The tape or filter is mounted on a
stub, carbon coated, then searched by imaging in the SEM. As
each particle is located it is analysed by the EDX analyser.
Images are obtained from the backscattered detector so
particles that contain high atomic number elements can be
easily distinguished from the generally low atomic number
background.
Manual Searching The sample is
searched using a combination of beam shift and stage movement
however it is not an attractive proposition. Although
particles from Gun Shot Residue vary from 0.5 to 50µm the
larger ones are rapidly lost, probably within a few minutes of
being deposited, and those left will be generally less than
10µm in size. If you consider a typical search area to be
1cm x 1cm then the problem becomes clear when you realise that
this area equates to 100,000,000 square microns in which there
may be only two or three particles, each a few microns in
diameter.
Disadvantages of Manual
Searching
Very time
consuming.
Tiring and
cannot be carried out for more than a few hours at a
time.
Open to
operator lapses.
Ties up
both instrument and operator from other important work.
Automatic Searching The CamScan
system speeds up this operation enormously by searching each
sample automatically.
Specimen
stage The specimen stage on both the CamScan MX2500
and MV2300 have a proven ability to withstand the rigours of
operating day and night year by year without requiring any
service attention.
They are equipped with Fastrac High
Precision Stage Control offering extremely fast, accurate
stage positioning and precise recall in X,Y and Z
axes.
Directly
coupled linear on-stage encoders allow the true sample
position
to be continuously monitored.
Closed loop
software control ensures extremely rapid and precise
stage
positioning without overshoot.
Stage
position readout to ±0.5µm resolution.
Auto Search
Routine Up to 15 x 12mm dia. sample stubs can be
loaded into the chamber for auto search or 11 x 25mm square
stubs and left unattended - this leaves a spare position for
the calibration standard.
During auto search a continually updated
table of found particles is displayed showing: Positional
co-ordinates. Elemental composition /
classification. Particle size.
During auto search an image and spectra of
each verified particle is displayed as it is being analysed
and then this information is stored and can be recalled later.
Particles are classified using the program
developed by the FSS, London Metropolitan Forensic Laboratory
in conjunction with CamScan. |