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Volatile organic compounds from the combustion of human and animal tissue
Authors:J.D. DeHaan   D.J. Brien  R. Large
Affiliation:

1Fire-Ex Forensics, Inc., 3505 Sonoma Blvd. #20, PMB 314, Vallejo, California 94590, USA

2Technical Support Services, 4205 Cincinnati Ave, Rocklin, California 95765, USA

3M-Scan Ltd., 3 Millars Business Centre, Fishponds Close, Wokingham RG41 2TZ, United Kingdom

Abstract:The volatile by-products of the combustion of ordinary fuels such as wood, polystyrene, polyethylene, urethane foam, PVC and the like are well known to the forensic fire debris examiner. When a fire involves a human body, volatile species are produced that are not so well known, including various alkenes and aldehydes. These have sometimes been mistaken for the residues of unusual accelerants. In an attempt to document what volatiles are produced by the combustion of animal fat and human fat, the authors have used an open-tube pyrolysis probe as a microfurnace to burn small samples of unembalmed subcutaneous fat from human, avian and porcine sources, and collect volatiles by charcoal strip adsorption. The volatile products were analyzed by GC/MS. Predominant species included aldehydes in the C6-C10 range, homologous series of alkenes and alkanes, and other hydrocarbon products. These results were compared to those obtained by free-burning (open flame in air) of similar specimens and to the volatiles detected in debris from beneath a human cadaver in a test fire. Differences between the volatile profiles produced by human fat as compared to pork and chicken fat and adventitious sources of such volatiles are discussed.
Keywords:Forensic science   fire investigation   combustion   pyrolysis   human   GC-MS   volatile
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