Effect of substrate surface topography on forensic development of latent fingerprints with iron oxide powder suspension

B J Jones, R Downham, V G Sears

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Latent fingerprint deposition and effectiveness of detection are strongly affected by the surface on which prints are deposited. Material properties, surface roughness, morphology, chemistry and hydrophobicity can affect the usefulness or efficacy of forensic print development techniques. Established protocols outline appropriate techniques and sequences of processes for broad categories of operational surfaces. This study uses atomic force microscopy and scanning electron microscopy to investigate a series of surfaces classified as smooth, non-porous plastic. Latent prints developed with iron oxide powder suspension are analysed on a range of scales from macro to nano to help elucidate the interaction mechanisms between the latent fingerprint, development agent and underlying surface. Differences between surfaces have a strong effect, even within this single category. We show that both average roughness and topographical feature shape, characterised by skew, kurtosis and lay, are important factors to consider for the processing of latent fingerprints. Copyright ?? 2010 John Wiley \& Sons, Ltd.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)438-4742
    Number of pages4305
    JournalSurface and Interface Analysis
    Volume42
    Issue number5
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2010

    Keywords

    • Appropriate techniques
    • Atomic force microscopy
    • Development technique
    • Fingerprints
    • Forensic
    • Interaction mechanisms
    • Iron oxides
    • Latent
    • Latent fingerprint
    • Material property
    • Microscopy
    • Powder suspension
    • scanning electron microscopy
    • Substrate surface
    • surface morphology
    • Surface roughness
    • Surfaces
    • Surface structure
    • Topographical features
    • Underlying surface

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