Assessment of solvents for the recovery of nitroglycerine from hands using cotton swabs

Eight solvents were compared for their relative efficiency in removing nitroglycerine from the hands of persons handling explosives. The amount of interfering material also removed from the hands by the cotton swabs and the stability of the nitroglycerine in the solvent used were also investigated....

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of forensic sciences Vol. 27; no. 4; p. 792
Main Authors Twibell, J D, Home, J M, Smalldon, K W, Higgs, D G, Hayes, T S
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.10.1982
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Summary:Eight solvents were compared for their relative efficiency in removing nitroglycerine from the hands of persons handling explosives. The amount of interfering material also removed from the hands by the cotton swabs and the stability of the nitroglycerine in the solvent used were also investigated. Aqueous solvents yielded the best recoveries, when the extracts were partially purified by thin-layer chromatography before analysis, but the explosive was degraded rapidly by microorganisms that grew in the solutions. Of the aqueous, organic, and polar solvents tested, ethanol was found to offer the most complete, consistent, and stable recovery.
ISSN:0022-1198
DOI:10.1520/JFS12194J