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An investigation into the spatial elemental distribution within a pane of glass by time of flight secondary ion mass spectrometry
Journal article   Peer reviewed

An investigation into the spatial elemental distribution within a pane of glass by time of flight secondary ion mass spectrometry

John Coumbaros, John Denman, K. Paul Kirkbride, G. Stewart Walker and William Skinner
Journal of forensic sciences, Vol.53(2), pp.312-320
2008
PMID: 18284530

Abstract

Legal Medicine Life Sciences & Biomedicine Medicine, Legal Science & Technology
Advances in the technology employed for the manufacture of glass have resulted in a final glass product with little variability in terms of its physical and optical properties. For example, the refractive index of Australian float glass tends to lie between 1.5189 and 1.5194. It has therefore become necessary to complement physical and optical methods for forensic glass comparison with instrumental elemental analyses. In a previous study, time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry has been shown to offer potential for the analysis of glass particles as small as a few tens of microns across. In this study, the three-dimensional homogeneity of a sheet of float glass is described, and consequences for forensic elemental analysis of glass particles of such size are explored. Variation in Si, Ca, Mg, and Na levels immediately under the nonfloat surface was observed, with the variance accompanied by a decrease in refractive index.

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#16 Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions

Source: InCites

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Citation topics
2 Chemistry
2.244 Chemometrics
2.244.1784 Forensic Spectroscopy
Web Of Science research areas
Medicine, Legal
ESI research areas
Clinical Medicine
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