Chemical technology news from across RSC Publishing.
Could henna help catch criminals?
04 July 2008
Scientists from Australia and Israel have discovered a new, safe way of detecting invisible fingerprints.

Amino acids react with lawsone to give strongly luminscent fingerprints. |
Fingerprints on porous surfaces such as paper are usually detected by a chemical called ninhydrin. Ninhydrin reacts with amino acids secreted by the fingers and turns invisible fingerprints dark purple. But ninhydrin is an irritant and so scientists are looking for safer alternatives.
Now, Simon Lewis at Curtin University of Technology, Perth, Australia and colleagues have found that a component of henna can work in a similar way to ninhydrin but without causing irritation. Henna is a traditional skin and hair dye, made from the leaves of the plant Lawsonia inermis. It has been used for more than a thousand years without ill effect.
- Della Wilkinson, Royal Canadian Mounted Police
'The discovery will no doubt generate lots of activity in the global forensic identification community,' says Della Wilkinson, a forensic expert from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. 'Lawsone has interesting spectroscopic characteristics that could prove to be very useful when examining surfaces that fluoresce under excitation wavelengths used for existing detection reagents.'
'This research opens the possibility of a whole suite of new analogues that may lead to further improvements in fingerprint detection,' says Lewis. His team are currently testing other closely related compounds.
Freya Mearns
Link to journal article
Lawsone: a novel reagent for the detection of latent fingermarks on paper surfaces
Renee Jelly, Simon W. Lewis, Chris Lennard, Kieran F. Lim and Joseph Almog, Chem. Commun., 2008, 3513
DOI: 10.1039/b808424f
Also of interest
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Electrochemical method reads fingerprints more easily
Swiss scientists have developed a way to detect fingerprints by measuring the chemical traces they leave on a surface.
Crime Scene to Court
Copyright: 2004Peter C White
Covers all three main areas of an investigation where forensic science is practised, namely the scene of the crime, the forensic laboratory and the court.
