4.1 Article

Thermogravimetric analysis and chemometric based methods for soil examination: Application to soil forensics

Journal

FORENSIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 17, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.forc.2019.100191

Keywords

Forensic chemistry; Thermogravimetric analysis; Principal component analysis; Linear discriminant analysis; Chemometrics; Soil forensics

Funding

  1. University Grant Commission (UGC, India)
  2. SERB, Department of Science & Technology (DST) through the EMR project [EMR/2016/001103]
  3. SERB, Department of Science & Technology (DST) through PURSE-II grant

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The potential of thermogravimetric analysis combined with chemometric methods is explored for the forensic investigation of soil samples. In the present research, three milestones are achieved by thermal techniques; the identification of the patterns in the thermogram with their chemical interpretation; the development of indices to explain the extent of organic matter stability in relation with its thermal stability; and application of multivariate statistical analysis in the prediction of geographical regions of the soil. The characterization of soil samples gives an idea about the presence of organic/inorganic components. The thermal degradation of soil samples is observed by ATR-FTIR spectroscopy. The standard normal variate normalization is performed on the obtained dataset; it minimizes the variation caused by a varying amount of soil samples. The discrimination of soil samples is achieved by using multivariate algorithms including hierarchical cluster analysis (HCA), and principal component analysis (PCA). A linear discrimination function model (LDA) is developed for the classification of unknown soil samples into their respective geographical groups. The presented methodology provides a reproducible and unbiased identification and thus, makes thermal methods as attractive tools for the examination of soil/cement/clay related forensic cases.

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