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WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – Fast,
highly reliable detection of residues that could
indicate the presence of explosives and other hazardous
materials inside luggage is now possible with technology
under development at Purdue University.
A research
team led by R. Graham Cooks has found a way to determine
the presence on a surface of trace quantities of
chemicals – such
as those found in biological and chemical warfare
agents, as well as several common explosives – within
a few seconds. The researchers' method uses a tool
common in many chemistry and biology labs called
a mass spectrometer that has been modified to analyze
samples directly from the environment rather than
requiring the lengthy pre-treatment that laboratory
mass spectrometry samples typically require. According to Cooks, no portable device is currently
on the market that can analyze samples in this manner.
The team had previously developed a prototype device
that detects nanogram-sized samples, but with recent
improvements the device has proven successful at
detecting at the picogram (trillionths of a gram)
level in lab tests, about 1,000 times less material
than previously required.
Cooks said he thinks a portable tool based on the
technology could prove valuable for security in public
places worldwide.
"In the amount of time it requires to take
a breath, this technology can sniff the surface of
a piece of luggage and determine whether a hazardous
substance is likely to be inside, based on residual
chemicals brushed from the hand of someone loading
the suitcase," said Cooks, who is the Henry
Bohn Hass Distinguished Professor of Analytical Chemistry
in Purdue's College of Science. "We think it
could be useful in screening suspect packages in
airports, train stations and other places where there
have been problems in the past. Because the technology
works on other surfaces, such as skin and clothing,
as well, it also could help determine whether an
individual has been involved in the handling of these
chemicals."
J.L. Beauchamp, a chemist at the California Institute
of Technology who has worked in mass spectrometry
for more than four decades, said the team's research
on desorption electrospray ionization, or DESI, can
solve a number of problems.
"The nature of explosive materials has made
them difficult to detect with mass spectrometry," said
Beauchamp, who is also a member of the National Academy
of Sciences. "Cooks' group has solved this problem
with DESI, and combined with recent developments
in the field has developed what may be a practical
and widely deployable method for detecting and positively
identifying not only explosives, but also a wide
range of substances that might be employed by terrorist
groups."
The research announcement appeared this week as
an accelerated article in the journal Analytical
Chemistry's Web site. Cooks developed the method
with the assistance of his Purdue colleagues Ismael
Cotte-Rodríguez, Zoltán Takáts,
Nari Talaty and Huanwen Chen.
Mass spectrometers are the workhorses of many chemistry
labs because these machines can deliver highly accurate
and reliable analyses of substances interesting to
scientists, including pharmaceutical developers.
The devices also are often used by law enforcement
to test suspicious looking residues that could indicate
the presence of explosives or drugs inside packages.
But most mass spectrometers are unwieldy, cabinet-sized
machines that require samples to undergo hours of
intensive preparation before testing, which can be
a problem if officials need to test a large number
of containers quickly.
"A mass spectrometer is one of the best tools
we've got, but scientists have known for years that
without a way to streamline the analytical process,
mass spectrometry will have limited use in the field," said
Talaty, a graduate student in Cooks' lab. "But
with the present technology, we can now analyze samples
rapidly, without any pretreatment. It has already
been used to analyze pharmaceuticals at up to three
samples per second."
Cooks' team has made several strides in improving
mass spectrometry over the past few years, having
found ways to both decrease the size of the spectrometers
and analyze samples rapidly under standard environmental
conditions. Their most recent work with DESI, which
involves directing a spray of reactive chemicals
onto a surface to dislodge suspicious chemicals and
sucking the mixture into a spectrometer for analysis,
has allowed them to detect hazardous substances at
unprecedentedly low quantities and with equally unprecedented
speed.
"Trace and residue analysis of explosives has
been a difficult task due to deliberate concealment,
the small quantities of material available and the
presence of other compounds that can interfere with
the analysis," said Cotte-Rodríguez,
also a graduate student in Cooks' lab. "But
the 'spray' technique we use, combined with small
tandem mass spectrometers that can confirm the identity
of a particular explosive, gives this method both
unusual sensitivity and quick turnaround time, even
compared with what we achieved earlier this year."
Talaty said the team's forthcoming spectrometry
gear, which will weigh less than 25 pounds, fits
into a backpack and returns a negligible number of
false readings, both factors that are also important
to law enforcement officials. The small instrument
is currently being fitted to work with the DESI ionization
method described in the team's paper.
"You don't want to lug around gear that you
can't carry on your person, and once you get it to
a site, you want it to give you the straight story
on what you're looking at and be able to confirm
it," he said. "This technology can do both."
Although DESI sensors still have difficulty classifying
compounds with many different components, he said,
this limitation would not likely be much of an issue
in bomb detection because explosives do not generally
contain that many.
"If you tried to detect a particular compound
out of a mixture of thousands of different substances,
you might begin to see the limitations of this method," Talaty
said. "But real-world explosives are not that
complex. In any case, the sensitivity of DESI is
high enough that officials could find what they need
to if it's there. No system is flawless, but if we
deployed this technology to transportation centers
throughout the world, it would make it far more difficult
for terrorists to get away with planting bombs where
people congregate."
Cooks' team is associated with several research
centers at or affiliated with Purdue, including the
Bindley Bioscience Center, the Indiana Instrumentation
Institute, Inproteo (formerly the Indiana Proteomics
Consortium) and the Center for Sensing Science and
Technology.
This research was sponsored in part by Inproteo,
Prosolia and the Office of Naval Research.
Writer: , (765) 494-2081, cboutin@purdue.edu
Sources: R. Graham Cooks, (765) 494-5263, cooks@purdue.edu
Nari Talaty, (765) 494-9420, ntalaty@purdue.edu
Purdue News Service: (765) 494-2096; purduenews@purdue.edu
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