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Fiber Analysis

Fiber Analysis. Physical Aspects of Forensic Science. Fiber Evidence. A fiber is the smallest unit of a textile material that has a length many times greater than its diameter . A fiber can be spun with other fibers to form a yarn that can be woven or knitted to form a fabric.

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Fiber Analysis

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  1. Fiber Analysis Physical Aspects of Forensic Science .

  2. Fiber Evidence A fiber is the smallest unit of a textile material that has a length many times greater than its diameter. A fiber can be spun with other fibers to form a yarn that can be woven or knitted to form a fabric. The type and length of fiber used, the type of spinning method, and the type of fabric construction all affect the transfer of fibers and the significance of fiber associations. This becomes very important when there is a possibility of fiber transfer between a suspect and a victim during the commission of a crime. Matching unique fibers on the clothing of a victim to fibers on a suspect’s clothing can be very helpful to an investigation, whereas the matching of common fibers such as white cotton or blue denim fibers would be less helpful. The discovery of crosstransfers and multiple fiber transfers between the suspect's clothing and the victim's clothing dramatically increases the likelihood that these two individuals had physical contact. http://www.fbi.gov/hq/lab/fsc/backissu/july2000/deedric3.htm#Fiber%20Evidence

  3. Natural Fibers Many different natural fibers that come from plants and animals are used in the production of fabric. Cotton fibers are the plant fibers most commonly used in textile materials The animal fiber most frequently used in the production of textile materials is wool, and the most common wool fibers originate from sheep. http://www.fireflydiapers.com/articles/diaperarticle_naturalfibersabsorb.htm

  4. Fibers under a microscope Synthetic Fibers More than half of all fibers used in the production of textile materials are synthetic or man-made. Nylon, rayon, and polyester are all examples of synthetic fibers. Cross-section of a man-made fiber Images: http://www.trashforteaching.org/phpstore/product_images/YarnWS.JPG http://www.fbi.gov/hq/lab/fsc/backissu/july2000/deedric3.htm#Fiber%20Evidencehttp://www.jivepuppi.com/images/fiber_evidence.jpg

  5. Fibers Fibers are very useful as trace evidence: • Vary widely in class characteristics color, shape, chemical composition, etc. • Easily transferred from one source to another (carpets, clothes, etc.) • Significant persistence (won’t degrade)

  6. Importance of Fiber Evidence • Perpetrators of crimes are not always aware or able to control the fibers they have left behind or picked up

  7. Importance of Fiber Evidence • In contrast to hair, fibers offer much greater evidential value because they incorporate numerous variables • Number of fibers in each strand, diameter of strands and fibers, direction and number of twists, type of weave, and dye content, as well as foreign material embedded or adherent to the fiber

  8. Trace > Fibers How are fibers used as evidence? • As with other trace evidence, fibers can be transferred to/from a person or objects linking them to one another.

  9. Trace > Fibers How long do fibers persist? Most fiber evidence is lost (fall off) a short time after the transfer occurs. The fibers that do remain will be persistent.

  10. Trace > Fibers Fibers can be classified into three main categories: • Natural (animal, plant, mineral) • Manufactured • Synthetic

  11. Textile Fiber Defined • Defined as the smallest part of a textile material • Many objects in our environment (clothing, ropes, rugs, blankets, etc.) are composed of yarns made of textile fibers

  12. Animal (hairs) Wool, cashmere, silk Vegetable Cotton, kapok, linen Mineral Asbestos Manmade Acetate, rayon, nylon, acrylic, polyester, and olefin Textile Fiber Categories

  13. Trace > Fibers > Natural Natural Fibers: • Found in nature • Can be artificially colored or treated Cotton Wool Hemp

  14. Animal Fibers Wool - Hairs from sheep • Most common of animal fibers • Hairs are spun to form thread Silk - comes from silkworm • Spun as double filament (separated before use) • Because of length, doesn’t shed easily Other Hairs from Animals

  15. Animal Fibers • Woolen fibers occupy less than 1% of all fibers used in production of textile materials • Wool has a microscopic structure that is characteristic of hair • The cuticle (outer covering) is made of flattened cells, commonly called scales

  16. Animal Fibers (continued) • The scales resemble shingles of a roof and are one of the most useful features to ID an unknown textile fiber as wool • Other animal hairs are not as frequently encountered so they can be quite valuable if they occur as evidence • Include goat (cashmere, mohair), llama (alpaca, vicuna, guanaco), and camel hair

  17. Animal Fibers • Cattle and rabbit hair are found in the manufacture of certain kinds of felts • Felts are made from water suspensions of randomly arranged fibers. When the fibers settle out, the water is removed and the mass of fibers is pressed to form the felt • Some modern felts are no longer made exclusively from hairs but are mixtures with other fibers

  18. Animal Fibers • Silk places a distant second to wool in occurrence, and its use has decreased since development of artificial fibers • Silk fibers are not very often encountered in crime investigations, probably because silk fabrics do not shed very easily

  19. Trace > Fibers > Natural Plant Fibers Cotton - seed hairs of cotton plant • by far most common fiber(find almost everywhere) Under microscope, fibers resemble twisted ribbon

  20. Vegetable Fibers • Only cotton is found in any large extent in items of clothing • Approximately 24% of total US textile fiber production was cotton in 1979 • Other plant fibers, such as jute and sisal, are seen in various types of cordage and baggings

  21. Vegetable Fibers • Cotton fibers have a distinctive flattened, twisted microscopic appearance, which is quite characteristic • The fibers resemble a twisted ribbon • In mercerizing process, fibers are treated with alkali, making them swell up and become more rounded and less twisted in appearance. • This process results in improved texture and feel, but the fibers are still recognizable as cotton under the microscope

  22. Vegetable Fibers • Undyed cotton fibers are so common they have little value as physical evidence • Almost any surface or dust sample will be found to contain white cotton fibers Household Dust

  23. Trace > Fibers > Natural Other Plant Fibers: Linen - stem fiber from flax plant Kapok - from seed hairs of kapok plant Other fibers - Manila, hemp, sisal, jute

  24. Mineral Fibers Asbestos - crystalline material • Used to be used for insulation • Fractures into thin rods that can get into your lungs; can kill you • Not used much anymore

  25. Filament vs. Staple Filament: Long continuous fiber (like silk) Staple: Filament is cut into smaller pieces; staples are spun together to form thread (like cotton)

  26. ManadeFibers • Represent approximately 75% of total textile fiber production in US • Can be defined as a fiber of a particular chemical composition that has been manufactured into a particular shape and size, contains a certain amount of various additives, and has been processed in a particular way

  27. Manmade Fibers • Within the 6 most seen of the 21 generic classifications established by the US Federal Trade Commission, there are well over a 1,000 different fiber types • Therefore, numerous fiber types can be present in the composition of textile materials • This is true before even considering differences in color

  28. Manufactured Fibers Regenerated Fibers • Cellulose is dissolved, then resolidified to form the polymer fiber • Can occur in filament or staple form Example:Rayon

  29. Synthetic Fibers • Man made • Can also be filament or staple Examples: Nylon and Polyester

  30. Synthetic Fibers Acrylics • More common as evidence • Usually in staple form • Staples spun together, similar to wool

  31. Trace > Fibers > Analysis Begin by identifying and comparing class characteristics for unknown sample (evidence) and known sample. Known Unknown

  32. Trace > Fibers > Analysis Fibers from rug in a van. Fibers found on victim.

  33. Trace > Fibers > Analysis Class characteristics Color: microscopic examination Size: length and width can be measured Shape: cross section is viewed

  34. Class characteristics Refractive Index – n. The ratio of the speed of light in air or in a vacuum to the speed of light in another medium. Other microscopic properties (PLM)

  35. Class characteristics Chemical Composition: determined by advanced instrumentation

  36. Threads, Yarn, Rope, Cordage Smallest component is fibers (staple) twisted together to form thread or is a filament. This thread can then be twisted with other threads to form a thicker thread (string, etc.) This thicker cord can then be twisted with other thicker cords, etc.

  37. Threads, Yarn, Rope, Cordage Small cords or fibers twisted together to form larger cords • At each step, the number of cords can be counted. • At each step, the twist direction is either “S” or “Z”

  38. Important to Remember: • It is important to collect evidence from both complainants and suspects as soon as possible • Studies show that some 80% of fibers can be expected to be lost in four hours, with just 5-10% remaining at the end of 24 hours

  39. Methods of Examination • In the recent past, the ID and comparison of fibers were at a relatively simple level which relied heavily on microscopy

  40. Generic class Polymer composition Finish--bright/dull Cross-sectional shape Melting point Refractive Indices Birefringence Color Fluorescence Absorption spectrum Dye class Dye Components From Less than 1 cm of a 20 mm Diameter Fiber It is Possible to Determine:

  41. Microscopy • Microscopic examination provides the quickest, most accurate, and least destructive means of determining the microscopic characteristics and polymer type of textile fibers.

  42. Microscopic View Acetate Dacron

  43. Stereomicroscope • Should be used first to examine fibers. • Physical features such as crimp, length, color, relative diameter, luster, apparent cross section, damage, and adhering debris should be noted. • Fibers are then tentatively classified into broad groups such as synthetic, natural, or inorganic.

  44. Comparison Microscope • If all of the characteristics are the same under the stereoscope, then the comparison microscope is used. • A point-by-point and side-by-side comparison provides the most discriminating method of determining if two or more fibers are consistent with originating from the same source.

  45. Comparison Microscopy • Side-by-side Comparison • Bright Field Adjustment

  46. Comparison Microscopy • Characterization • Fluorescence • Chemical factors • Environmental factors

  47. Comparison Microscope • Comparisons should be made under the same illumination conditions at the same magnifications. • This requires color balancing the light sources. • A balanced neutral background color is optimal.

  48. Fluorescence Microscopy • The sample is illuminated by ultraviolet light, causing some phases to fluoresce so they can be observed, counted, sized and mapped. Kevlar fibers in complex composite material strongly fluoresce.

  49. Polarized Light Microscope • Perhaps the most versatile of all microscopes; allows the analyst to actually see and manipulate the sample of interest. • Refractive indices, birefringence, and dispersion can all be quantitatively determined.

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