Portable device can detect fentanyl in street drugs within seconds: researchers
TORONTO — Ontario researchers have teamed up to test a portable device that can detect the presence of potentially deadly fentanyl in street drugs and deliver the results in mere seconds.
The scientists at the University of Ottawa and Carleton University have set up the mass spectrometer instrument at the supervised injection site within the Sandy Hill Community Health Center in the nation’s capital, which like many Canadian cities has witnessed rising numbers of overdose deaths due to the illicit narcotic.
Jeff Smith, director of the mass spectrometry centre at Carleton, said the device is able to detect fentanyl in a minuscule sample of a street drug like heroin within 20 seconds — compared to the months it would take through standard lab testing.
Mass spectrometers are able to differentiate components of drugs by assessing their mass, or molecular weight.