NIST Researchers to Test New Approach for Detecting Cannabis in Breath

NIST Researchers to Test New Approach for Detecting Cannabis in Breath

An illustration showing a researcher analyzing breath samples in the lab.



Credit: NIST


With cannabis now outpacing alcohol as Americans’ daily drug of choice, there is a critical need for a scientifically validated breath test to detect the recent use of the substance in drivers.


But developing such a breath test has proved a significant challenge.


Last year, researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the University of Colorado Boulder found that a single breath test may not be reliable in detecting recent cannabis use because cannabis can linger in the body for weeks, making it difficult to distinguish between past and present use. 


Now, these researchers are considering a new approach: two breath tests administered within roughly an hour of each other. If their research is successful, it could lead to a roadside test for cannabis use that involves two breath tests given at a specified interval apart.


“This is potentially paradigm-changing,” said NIST materials research engineer Kavita Jeerage. “If successful, it could pave the way for on-the-spot detection of recent cannabis use by law enforcement.”


Breath tests for alcohol have been around for nearly a century. They detect ethanol, which is exhaled in a gaseous vapor and correlates with the amount of ethanol in the blood.


But tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the main psychoactive ingredient in cannabis, is present in the breath at a much smaller concentration than ethanol. NIST chemical engineer Tara Lovestead has likened detecting it to “looking for a needle in a haystack.”


In addition, the body breaks down and eliminates cannabis much more slowly than ethanol. NIST and Univer ..

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