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Chapter 8 Hair, Fibers, And Paint

Chapter 8 Hair, Fibers, And Paint. Introduction. Physical evidence in a variety of crimes Not yet possible to individualize human hair to any single head or body through morphology Still has value as physical evidence. HAIR FIBERS AND PAINT. Introduction.

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Chapter 8 Hair, Fibers, And Paint

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  1. Chapter 8Hair, Fibers, And Paint

  2. Introduction • Physical evidence in a variety of crimes • Not yet possible to individualize human hair to any single head or body through morphology • Still has value as physical evidence HAIR FIBERS AND PAINT

  3. Introduction • Properly collected and submitted to the laboratory • Accompanied by adequate number of standard or reference samples • Provides strong corroborative evidence for placing individual at crime scene HAIR FIBERS AND PAINT

  4. Fiber Evidence

  5. Types of Fibers: Natural Fibers • Derived in whole from animal or plant sources • Wool • Mohair • Cashmere • Furs • Cotton • Animal fibers: hair • Cotton: most prevalent HAIR FIBERS AND PAINT

  6. Natural Polymers Figure 8–10  Starch and cellulose are natural carbohydrate polymers consisting of a large number of repeating units or monomers.

  7. Types of Fibers: Man-made Fibers • Manufactured • Regenerated fibers • Manufactured from natural raw materials • Rayon, acetate, and triacetate • Synthetic fibers • Produced solely from synthetic chemicals • Nylons, polyesters, and acrylics HAIR FIBERS AND PAINT

  8. Types of Fibers: Polymers • Macromolecules • Synthetic fibers • Repeating units known as monomers HAIR FIBERS AND PAINT Figure 8–9  The chain-link model of a segment of a polymer molecule. The actual molecule may contain as many as several million monomer units or links.

  9. Fiber Evidence • Identify the origin of the fiber • Or at least narrow the possibilities to a limited number of sources • Fabrics that can be exactly fitted together at their torn edges = fabrics were of common origin HAIR FIBERS AND PAINT

  10. Fiber Evidence • Microscopic comparisons between questioned and standard/reference fibers • color and diameter characteristics • comparison microscope HAIR FIBERS AND PAINT

  11. Fiber Evidence HAIR FIBERS AND PAINT

  12. Acrylic

  13. Polyester

  14. Cotton

  15. Wool

  16. Fiber Evidence • Other morphological features for comparing fibers are • Lengthwise striations on surface of fiber • Presence of delustering particles that reduce shine • Cross-sectional shape of the fiber HAIR FIBERS AND PAINT

  17. Fiber Evidence • Compositional differences • Dyes that were applied to fibers during the manufacturing process • Microspectrophotometer • Chromatography of pigment • Chemical composition of fibers • Birefringence: crystalline property of fiber HAIR FIBERS AND PAINT

  18. Burn Test HAIR FIBERS AND PAINT

  19. Burn Test HAIR FIBERS AND PAINT

  20. Burn Test HAIR FIBERS AND PAINT

  21. Methods For Fiber Comparison • Visible light microspectrophotometer • Compare colors of fibers through spectral patterns. • Chromatographic separation: dye composition • Generic class of fibers • Infrared spectrophotometry • Polarizing microscope: characteristic index of refraction HAIR FIBERS AND PAINT

  22. Collection and Preservation • Investigator’s task • Look for minute strands of fibers • Identify and preserve potential “carriers” of fiber evidence • Relevant articles of clothing • Packaged carefully in separate paper bags • If necessary to remove a fiber from an object • Use clean forceps • Place in a small sheet of paper • Fold and label the paper • Place the paper packet inside another container HAIR FIBERS AND PAINT

  23. FBI Hair Paper • http://www.fbi.gov/hq/lab/fsc/backissu/jan2004/research/2004_01_research01b.htm

  24. Summary

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