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FIBER ANALYSIS. Fibers  Defined as the smallest unit of a textile visible to the naked eye  Used as supporting evidence to help place an individual.

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Presentation on theme: "FIBER ANALYSIS. Fibers  Defined as the smallest unit of a textile visible to the naked eye  Used as supporting evidence to help place an individual."— Presentation transcript:

1 FIBER ANALYSIS

2 Fibers  Defined as the smallest unit of a textile visible to the naked eye  Used as supporting evidence to help place an individual at the crime scene  95% of fibers are lost within the first 24 hours, so fiber collection at the beginning of an investigation is critical

3 Transfer  Direct transfer: fibers transferred directly from victim to suspect or suspect to victim  Secondary transfer: a victim has fibers that were picked up and then transferred to the suspect

4 Fiber Analysis—What Do You Look For? Type of fiber: what is the composition of the fiber? How common or rare? Color: do fibers from the suspect’s clothes match the color found in the victim’s house? Is the type of dye the same? Number of fibers found: more fibers suggest possible violence or prolonged contact Where the fiber was found: can be used to place the suspect at the crime scene

5 Fiber Analysis—What Do You Look For? (cont.) Textile the fiber originated from: carpet? Upholstery? Multiple fiber transfers: are there numerous sources of fibers; again, more sources suggests violence or prolonged contact Type of crime committed: each type of crime has an expected pattern of contact between suspect, victim, and crime scene Time between crime and discovery of fiber: the longer the time, the less value the fiber has as evidence

6 Fiber Analysis—Physical Characteristics  Texture: how does the fiber feel? Rough? Smooth?  Color  Crimp: is the fiber straight or crimped (wavy)  Pliability: is the fiber pliable (bends) or non-pliable (breaks)  Resilience: is the fiber resilient (reshapes after being crumpled) or non-resilient

7 Fiber Analysis—Chemical Characteristics  Flame Test: what does the fiber do when placed near the flame? In the flame? Moved out of the flame? What color is the flame?  Odor: what odor does the fiber have after being placed in the flame  Residue: is there any residue? If so, what does the residue look like?  pH Do not perform any test that destroys the fiber unless large quantities of the fibers were collected at the crime scene

8 Fiber Burn Analysis Key

9 Fiber Classification  Natural Fibers: made from animals, plants, or minerals that are mined from the ground  Synthetic Fibers: man-made fibers; these fibers can be derived from cellulose (regenerated fibers) or from petroleum products (synthetic polymer fibers)

10 Natural Fibers—Animals  Fur—used to make coats and gloves  Hair—wool (sheep), cashmere and mohair (goats), and angora (rabbits, camels, llamas, alpacas)  Silk—from the cocoons of the silk caterpillar All animal fibers are made up of protein.

11 Natural Fibers—Plant  Seeds—cotton is in the seedpod of cotton plants; easily woven and dyed so common in clothing  Fruit—coir is made from the covering surrounding coconuts; used to make baskets  Stem—flax (linen) and jute (twine)  Leaf—manila and sisal; both used for twine All plant fibers are made up of cellulose.

12 Natural Fibers—Mineral  Fiberglass—fiber form of glass that is weak and brittle; used as insulation  Asbestos—very durable fibers used for pipe coverings, brake linings, ceiling tiles, and other uses

13 Synthetic Fibers—Regenerated Fibers  Cellulose is combined with chemicals such as acetate  Rayon—imitates natural fibers and generally is smooth and silky in appearance  Celanese—cellulose combined with acetate; used in carpets  Capron—breathable, light weight material used in high performance clothing

14 Synthetic Fibers—Synthetic Polymer Fibers  Polyester—common synthetic fiber; represents a large group of fibers with a common chemical makeup  Nylon—similar to polyester, but easily broken down by light and concentrated acid

15 Synthetic Fibers—Synthetic Polymer Fibers (cont.)  Acrylic—found in artificial wool or imitation fur; has a light, fluffy feel  Olefins—used in high performance clothing such as thermal socks and carpets because they are quick drying and resist wear

16 Microscopic Comparison of Natural and Synthetic Fibers

17 Yarns  Fibers too short in their raw state to make textiles can be spun together to make yarn  Any given yarn will have a direction of twist which can help with identification

18 Textiles  Fibers are woven into textiles (fabrics)  Weaving consists of arranging lengthwise threads (the warp) side by side and close together  Crosswise threads (the weft) are then woven back and forth in one of several different patterns

19 Weave Patterns  Plain: alternating warp and weft threads; firm and wears well, snag resistant, tends to wrinkle  Basket: alternating pattern of two weft crossing two warp threads; doesn’t wrinkle, not durable, shrinks when washed  Satin: one weft crosses over three or more warp threads; not durable, snags, shiny surface, high light reflectance

20 Weave Patterns (cont.)  Twill: weft is woven over three or more warps and then under one; next row, the pattern is shifted over one to the left or right by one warp thread; strong, dense, compact, diagonal design  Leno: uses two warp threads and a double weft thread; the two adjacent warp threads cross over each other; the weft travels left to right and is woven between the two warp threads; easily distorted with wear and washing, stretches in one direction only


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