Identification of Synthetic Drugs on Seized Blotter Papers Using ATR-FTIR and PLS-DA: Routine Application in a Forensic Laboratory

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FONTE

J. Braz. Chem. Soc.

DATA DE PUBLICAÇÃO

2021-03

RESUMO

Blotter papers seizures containing synthetic drugs have intensified over the last decades. These drugs were originally conceived as “legal” alternatives to traditional illicit drugs, designed to mimic their effects and circumvent control agencies. Reference methods for determining these substances on blotter papers are based on chromatographic techniques using mass spectrometry detection. However, these procedures are destructive, expensive, and time consuming. Some compounds are also thermolabile and not suitable for regular gas chromatography analyses. In this paper, two multivariate models were presented and incorporated in the routine of a forensic laboratory as a screening method. They were developed and validated using a representative dataset of 158 seizures analyzed by attenuated total reflectance-Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR) and a partial least squares-discriminant analysis (PLS-DA) model. The first model (model A) discriminates between samples with and without different types of drugs, and the second one (model B) discriminates between samples containing NBOMe and NBOH, two N-benzyl 2,5-dimethoxy substituted phenethylamine commonly incorporated into blotter papers. The proposed method is fast, non-destructive, and requires no sample preparation. Both models showed reliable results (misidentification errors < 10%), presented good results in a real forensic laboratory routine, and can be updated to include new drugs.

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