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The application of chemistry and its subfield, forensic toxicology, in a legal setting is called Forensic chemistry. Identification of unknown materials found at a crime scene can be assist by forensic chemist. High-performance liquid chromatography, gas chromatography, mass spectrometry, atomic absorption spectroscopy, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, and thin layer chromatography are the methods and instruments used to identify unknown substances. The range of different methods is important due to the destructive nature of some instruments and the number of possible unknown substances that can be found at a scene. Forensic chemists prefer using nondestructive methods first to preserve evidence and to determine which destructive methods will produce the best results.
Edelweiss Chemical Science Journal corresponds with many branches of science like organic chemistry, inorganic chemistry, physical chemistry, pharmaceutical chemistry, analytical chemistry, applied chemistry, biochemistry, chemical biology and many more. This Journal provides an open access platform for the young scientists and researchers from all over the globe to share their valuable information regarding the chemical science.
Researchers, authors, reviewers, and readers can use this page to find journal resources connected with Forensic Chemistry, including published articles, related academic topics, current issue content, archive material, and manuscript submission information.
Related article links for Forensic Chemistry will appear here as matching content is published in Edelweiss Chemical Science Journal (ISSN 2641-7383). Readers can also browse the journal archive and current issue for connected research.