FOR 414W
Chapter 1
Course Introduction
Jamie Kim
Department of Chemistry
Buffalo State College
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Instructor: Dr. Jamie Kim
Office: SAMC221
e-mail: kimj@buffalostate.edu,
Phone: (716) 878-5114
Lecture (2 cr, 2 hr/week)
1:00 PM – 1:50 PM, MW, SAMC223
Lab & Demo (1 cr, 3hr/week)
2:00 PM – 4:15 PM, M, SAMC223 or SAMC225
Office Hour
10:30 AM– 12:00 PM WF or by Appointment
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Course Description
1. Basic theory of analytical chemistry (concentration, calibration,
2. Proper procedures of laboratory practice will be instrocuded (QA,
etc) will be briefly reviewed.
QC, SOP, GLP, etc).
3. Principles and applications of various analytical techniques used
in forensic laboratory will be introduced.
4. These
techniques may
Chromatography
LC/MS/MS, etc), and so on.
include FTIR, UV/Vis, Raman,
(GC, HPLC, etc), MS (GC/MS, LC/MS,
5. Advantages and disadvantages of individual analytical technique
for quantitative and qualitative chemical analysis will be
discussed.
6. Classifications,
chemistry
forensic
related
laws,
and
of
compounds (alcohol, drugs, etc) will be introduced
7. Selected
applications
conducted/demonstrated
forensic-related samples.
these
of
using either unknown or
techniques
will
be
known
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See Your Syllabus
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Why Forensic Chemistry is
Important?
Forensic investigation via instrumental chemical
analysis is important to crime as well as various
pharmaceutical,
fields
environments,
food, national security safety,
energy, etc.
including
health,
pharmaceuticals
forensics
health
national
security
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Drug-Related Crime Statistics
Est. 1,745,712 (2004)
Federal drug control spending:
$8,179M (FY 1988) and $11,679M (FY 2004)
About 10,000 new job within 10 years estimated
by the American Academy of Forensic Sciences
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(AAFS)
Application of Forensic Chemistry: Drug Test
a. in the laboratory
samples
(urine, blood, hair, etc)
gas chromatography-
mass spectrometry (GC-MS)
qualitative and quantitative
analysis
b. on site
GC
MS
color change
drug test kit
saliva, urine, sweat,
hair, nail, or blood test
protein and drug complex
formation on the surface
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Goals in Forensic Chemical
Analysis (e.g. Blood Test)
Qualitative analysis: the determination of identities of
drugs (or their metabolites) that are present in a blood
sample.
Quantitative analysis: the determination of the amount
(concentrations) of drugs in a sample.
What drugs are in it? : cocaine and/or
benzoylecgonine, etc
How much? : cocaine: 2 mg/mL,
benzoylecgonine: 3 mg/mL, etc
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