Skip to main content

Bournemouth University

BU Research Blog

Latest research and knowledge exchange news at Bournemouth University

  • Home
  • RDS Team
    • Faculty-Facing Staff
    • Funding Development Team
    • Project Delivery Team
    • Research Excellence Team
    • RDS Governance Team
  • Clinical Governance @ BU
  • Research Ethics @ BU
  • REF
    • BU REF 2021 Code of Practice
    • Declaration of Staff Circumstances
    • BU’s Unit of Assessment Teams
    • REF FAQs
    • Archive – REF 2014
      • BU REF 2014 Code of Practice
      • REF 2014 Frequently Asked Questions
        • REF 2014 Overview
        • Staff eligibility
        • Mock REF 2014 (REF preparation) exercises at BU
        • REF 2014 Assessment of outputs
        • REF 2014 Staff selection
        • REF 2014 Equality and diversity
  • Impact
    • Partnerships & collaborations
    • Working with businesses
      • Higher Education Innovation Fund (HEIF)
    • Communicating your research
    • Influencing policy makers
    • Public engagement
      • Quick guide to public engagement
    • Student engagement
      • Stages of engagement
      • Case study: Sean Beer
      • Case study: James Gavin
      • Case study: Anna Feigenbaum
  • Research Toolkit
  • Research Lifecycle
  • Policy
  • PGR
    • The Doctoral College Team

11 March 2025

Ultra potent synthetic opioids

Awarded & submitted bids rpaul

drug powder and pills

The forensic science team at BU has been commissioned by the Home Office to evaluate an emerging threat to the U.K: ultra potent synthetic opioids. Our research has delivered a comprehensive chemical assessment of these dangerous drug compounds, evaluating differences between illicit drugs seized at borders versus inland, purity assessment, composition and variability, and headspace profiling to provide intelligence towards better detection of these drugs at borders. The work is led by Richard Paul, with co-investigators Ramin Boroujerdi, Sarah Upson, Santanu Majumder and Sam Rennie, all from the Life and Environmental Sciences department.

The illicit drug market has been dominated by the rise of fentanyl in North America in recent years, with a surge in drug related fatalities. The situation has now evolved with the emergence of non-fentanyl derived synthetic opioids, such as nitazenes, which are several times more potent than fentanyl, and can be as much as 500 times stronger than heroin. Urgent research is required to understand the nature of these drugs, and to provide intelligence to help detect these drugs when smuggled across borders.

Our analysis has shown that the purity of some of the nitazene compounds seized at borders is extremely high, with metonitazene and protonitazene at >98% pure. We’ve also developed a headspace analysis technique which examines the volatile molecules which comprise the odour profile of these drugs. This information is used to provide intelligence to the Home Office on which to base drug detection policy aimed at stopping the influx of these drugs into the U.K.  Our headspace technique revealed a complex array of aromatic organic compounds in the headspace above illicit nitazenes, and there is evidence that these compounds are used as precursors during illicit synthesis routes for these drugs.

This work is on-going and where possible we’ll post updates in the future. To find out more about the capabilities of our group, and other research we’re involved in, please see our group page here.

 

 

 

Related Posts

  • Volatile organic compounds as diagnostic biomarkers of skin cancer12 November 2024
  • Cafe Scientifique: The Secret information hidden in your hair6 December 2019
  • Synthetic Biology Applications in Defence – Multi-million pound competition26 August 2014
  • British Society of Criminology Annual Conference 201311 July 2013

BU staff can login below:

Other services

  • ProGRess logo

Don’t miss a post!

Subscribe for the BU Research Digest, delivered freshly every day.

Recent posts

BU research Funding opportunities EU
  • RSA: Getting Started, Securing Funding, and Advancing Your Career3 June 2025
  • Research Café: How are researchers working to prevent child drowning in rural Bangladesh? – Tuesday 1 July 6:30-8pm3 June 2025
  • New systematic review published by PhD student2 June 2025
  • Enterprise and Innovation sessions for BU researchers2 June 2025
  • Supervisory Lunchbite | ESRC South West Doctoral Training Partnership30 May 2025
  • Help highlight BU’s Impact – Share your involvement in Community and Cultural Events30 May 2025
  • MSCA Postdoctoral Fellowships 2025 Call30 May 2025
  • ERC Advanced Grant 2025 Webinar23 May 2025
  • Horizon Europe Work Programme 2025 Published19 May 2025
  • Horizon Europe 2025 Work Programme pre-Published28 April 2025
  • This week – Konfer – an innovation and collaboration platform17 March 2025
  • MSCA Postdoctoral Fellowships 202510 March 2025
  • MSCA Postdoctoral Fellowships 2025 Call30 May 2025
  • ERC Advanced Grant 2025 Webinar23 May 2025
  • European Migration Research and Impact – Invitation to a Roundtable Discussion16 April 2025
  • MSCA Postdoctoral Fellowships 202510 March 2025
  • Update on UKRO services13 February 2025
  • The ARTEMIS project consortium European research project exploring use of ‘virtual twins’ to better manage metabolic associated fatty liver disease4 February 2025

Search by Category

Search by popular post topics

AHRC BU research clinical research CMMPH CMWH collaboration collaborative research conference congratulations Doctoral College Dr. Pramod Regmi Edwin-blog-post ESRC EU event Events funding funding opportunities Fusion Health horizon 2020 HSC impact innovation knowledge exchange media midwifery Nepal nhs NIHR open access Prof. Edwin van Teijlingen Prof. Vanora Hundley publication public engagement publishing ref research Research Councils research professional RKE development framework RKEDF social sciences training widening participation

RSS Research Information Network

  • Physical Sciences Case studies: information use and discovery
  • Information handling in collaborative research: an exploration of five case studies
  • Information literacy monitoring and evaluation
  • Data centres: their use, value and impact
  • Heading for the open road: costs and benefits of transitions in scholarly communications

RSS UKRI

Browse all our categories
  • Awarded & submitted bids
  • BRIAN
  • BU Challenges
  • BU research
  • BU2025
  • Business Engagement
  • Centre for Excellence in Learning
  • Clinical Governance
  • Coffee Morning
  • conferences
  • COVID-19
  • data management
  • Delicious links
  • Doctoral College
  • ECR Network
  • EPSRC
  • ESRC
  • EU
  • Events
  • Featured
  • Featured academics
  • Festival of Learning
  • Friday profile
  • Funding opportunities
  • Fusion
  • Fusion Investment Fund
  • Fusion themes
  • Global engagement
  • Grants Academy
  • Guidance
  • hate crime
  • HE-BCI
  • HEIF
  • HSS Our 9 Research Entities
  • humanities
  • Impact
  • Industry collaboration
  • Info Days
  • innovation
  • international
  • Knowledge Exchange
  • Knowledge Exchange and Impact Team
  • Knowledge Transfer
  • Knowledge Transfer Partnership
  • mrc
  • News from the PVC
  • NHS
  • nhs
  • open accecss
  • open access
  • parliament
  • Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology
  • PG research
  • policy
  • Post-award
  • Postgraduate Research
  • pre-award
  • Public engagement
  • Publishing
  • R & KE Operations
  • REF 2029 impact case studies
  • REF Subjects
  • REF2029
  • Research assessment
  • Research Centres
  • Research communication
  • Research Concordat
  • Research Ethics
  • Research Ethics Panels
  • research governance
  • Research Integritiy
  • research integrity
  • research methods
  • Research news
  • research opportunities
  • research staff
  • Research Supervision
  • Research themes
  • Research Training
  • RKE development framework
  • staff profile pages
  • Strategic Investment Areas
  • Student Engagement
  • student research
  • the conversation
  • Training
  • UKRI
  • Uncategorized
  • Vitae
  • Women's Academic Network
  • writing
  • Twitter

© Bournemouth University 2025. All rights reserved.

  • Charitable status
  • Website privacy & cookies
  • Copyright and terms of use