Forensic Chemistry
Toxicology, drug analysis, and trace-evidence chemistry.
Forensic Chemistry — Toxicology, drug analysis, and trace-evidence chemistry.
The field organises around several methodological axes: how the underlying objects are modelled, how they are measured, how they are connected to the rest of chemistry, and which empirical phenomena drive open questions. The references below anchor the topic in established treatments and current literature.
Foundations and core methods
A primary reference for this area is Principles of Instrumental Analysis (Skoog et al., 2017), which lays out the core concepts that govern forensic chemistry. The treatment frames the subject within the broader context of analytical chemistry and motivates the conceptual vocabulary used throughout this page. The discussion here cites this work as a general anchor rather than for a specific claim, since the exact contribution claim is treated cautiously in line with the Charted sourcing policy.
A complementary perspective comes from Quantitative Chemical Analysis (Harris, 2015), which provides further background on the methods and results most relevant to forensic chemistry. Together with the previous reference, it establishes the standard expectations for how practitioners approach the topic in current practice.
Open questions
Open methodological questions in forensic chemistry include the transferability of the standard methods to harder regimes, the integration of newer measurement and modelling tools, and the connection to neighbouring subfields of analytical chemistry. Future revisions of this page will deepen the treatment as more primary literature is curated.
Prerequisites
Sources
- textbook · primary · 2017Principles of Instrumental Analysisskoog-2017, holler-2017, crouch-2017
- textbook · primary · 2015Quantitative Chemical Analysisharris-2015
In context
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