Forensic
investigations of oil spills aim to find the responsible
source(s) of the spill. Oil weathering processes change the chemical
composition of the spilled oil and make the matching of oil spill
samples to potential sources difficult. Diesel oil spill cases are
more challenging, because biomarkers recalcitrant to long-term weathering
are absent. We developed and tested a new method for the analysis
and matching of diesel oil spills using two-dimensional gas chromatography–high
resolution mass spectrometry (GC × GC – HRMS) and 2D-CHEMSIC
(2-Dimensional CHEMometric analysis of Selected Ion Chromatograms),
an extension of the CHEMSIC method to GC × GC data. The 2D-CHEMSIC
performs pixel-based analysis using chemometrics on concatenated sections
of 2D extracted ion chromatograms to assess the overall chemical variability
of the samples, with potential applications for matching spill-source
pairs in forensic investigations. The method was tested on samples
from a number of diesel oil spill cases, (i) distinguishing chemically
similar source diesels, (ii) investigating weathering effects on spill
samples to determine type and degree of weathering, and (iii) improving
the matching of diesel oil spills affected by weathering. Positive
matches for spill-source pairs were identified after excluding the
signals from the hydrocarbons most susceptible to evaporation, and
photo-oxidized spills were also matched due to the presence of unaffected
hydrocarbons. Forensic diagnostics obtained by the 2D-CHEMSIC were
validated by the conventional CEN-Tr method.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.