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Journal Article

Citation

Giannoukos S, Brkić B, Taylor S, Marshall A, Verbeck GF. Chem. Rev. 2016; 116(14): 8146-8172.

Affiliation

Department of Chemistry, University of North Texas , Denton, Texas 76201, United States.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, American Chemical Society)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

27388215

Abstract

Border control for homeland security faces major challenges worldwide due to chemical threats from national and/or international terrorism as well as organized crime. A wide range of technologies and systems with threat detection and monitoring capabilities has emerged to identify the chemical footprint associated with these illegal activities. This review paper investigates artificial sniffing technologies used as chemical sensors for point-of-use chemical analysis, especially during border security applications. This article presents an overview of (a) the existing available technologies reported in the scientific literature for threat screening, (b) commercially available, portable (hand-held and stand-off) chemical detection systems, and (c) their underlying functional and operational principles. Emphasis is given to technologies that have been developed for in-field security operations, but laboratory developed techniques are also summarized as emerging technologies. The chemical analytes of interest in this review are (a) volatile organic compounds (VOCs) associated with security applications (e.g., illegal, hazardous, and terrorist events), (b) chemical "signatures" associated with human presence, and

(c) threat compounds (drugs, explosives, and chemical warfare agents).


Language: en

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