Issue 24, 2020

Explosives detection by swabbing for improvised explosive devices

Abstract

Swabs taken from the surface of a suspicious object are a standard method of identifying a concealed explosive device in security-conscious locations like airports. In this paper we demonstrate a sensitive method to collect and detect trace explosive residues from improvised explosive devices using swabs and an optical sensor element. Swabs coated with a commercial fluoropolymer are used to collect material and are subsequently heated to thermally desorb the explosives, causing the quenching of light emission from a thin film luminescent sensor. We report the sorption and desorption characteristics of swabs loaded with 2,4-DNT tested with Super Yellow fluorescent sensors in a laboratory setting, with detection that is up to three orders of magnitude more sensitive than standard colorimetric tests. The method was then applied in field tests with raw military-grade explosives TNT, PETN and RDX, on various objects containing the explosives, and post-blast craters. We show for the first time results using organic semiconductors to detect sub-milligram amounts of explosive sorbed onto a substrate from real explosives in the field, giving a promising new approach for IED detection.

Graphical abstract: Explosives detection by swabbing for improvised explosive devices

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
01 Jul 2020
Accepted
04 Oct 2020
First published
05 Oct 2020
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Analyst, 2020,145, 7956-7963

Explosives detection by swabbing for improvised explosive devices

J. M. E. Glackin, R. N. Gillanders, F. Eriksson, M. Fjällgren, J. Engblom, S. Mohammed, I. D. W. Samuel and G. A. Turnbull, Analyst, 2020, 145, 7956 DOI: 10.1039/D0AN01312A

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