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Fluorescent Nanomaterials for the Development of Latent Fingerprints in Forensic Sciences

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TLDR
Compared to latent fingerprint development by traditional methods, the new methods using fluorescent nanomaterials can achieve high contrast, sensitivity, and selectivity while showing reduced toxicity.
Abstract
This review presents an overview on the application of latent fingerprint development techniques in forensic sciences. At present, traditional developing methods such as powder dusting, cyanoacrylate fuming, chemical method, and small particle reagent method, have all been gradually compromised given their emerging drawbacks such as low contrast, sensitivity, and selectivity, as well as high toxicity. Recently, much attention has been paid to the use of fluorescent nanomaterials including quantum dots (QDs) and rare earth upconversion fluorescent nanomaterials (UCNMs) due to their unique optical and chemical properties. Thus, this review lays emphasis on latent fingerprint development based on QDs and UCNMs. Compared to latent fingerprint development by traditional methods, the new methods using fluorescent nanomaterials can achieve high contrast, sensitivity, and selectivity while showing reduced toxicity. Overall, this review provides a systematic overview on such methods.

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Nanostructured Metal Chalcogenides for Energy Storage and Electrocatalysis

TL;DR: In this paper, the recent research progress on nanostructured metal sulfides and metal selenides for application in SIBs/LIBs and hydrogen/oxygen electrocatalysis (hydrogen evolution reaction, oxygen evolution reaction and oxygen reduction reaction) is summarized and discussed.
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Biomedical application of graphene: From drug delivery, tumor therapy, to theranostics

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Journal ArticleDOI

Real-Time Fluorescence in Situ Visualization of Latent Fingerprints Exceeding Level 3 Details Based on Aggregation-Induced Emission

TL;DR: A water-soluble probe TPA-1OH with aggregation-induced emission (AIE) activity is synthesized and used for expedient real-time fluorescence in situ visualization of latent fingerprints (LFPs) and the Level 3 details of LFPs are evidently visible under fluorescence microscopy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dual-Mode, Color-Tunable, Lanthanide-Doped Core-Shell Nanoarchitectures for Anti-Counterfeiting Inks and Latent Fingerprint Recognition.

TL;DR: Results indicated that the nanoarchitectures reported in this study may have great application prospects in information security and identity recognition.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Upconversion and Anti-Stokes Processes with f and d Ions in Solids

TL;DR: Before the 1960s, all anti-Stokes emissions, which were known to exist, involved emission energies in excess of excitation energies by only a few kT and were linked to thermal population of energy states above excitation states by such an energy amount.
Book

Handbook of Fingerprint Recognition

TL;DR: This unique reference work is an absolutely essential resource for all biometric security professionals, researchers, and systems administrators.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantum-dot-tagged microbeads for multiplexed optical coding of biomolecules.

TL;DR: Investigation and spectroscopic measurements indicate that the QD-tagged beads are highly uniform and reproducible, yielding bead identification accuracies as high as 99.99% under favorable conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recent advances in the chemistry of lanthanide-doped upconversion nanocrystals

TL;DR: This tutorial review focuses on the recent development of various synthetic approaches and possibilities for chemical tuning of upconversion properties, as well as giving an overview of biological applications of these luminescent nanocrystals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Luminescent quantum dots for multiplexed biological detection and imaging.

TL;DR: This work has shown how the emission wavelength of quantum-dot nanocrystals can be continuously tuned by changing the particle size, and a single light source can be used for simultaneous excitation of all different-sized dots.
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