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Forensic Glass Analysis

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Forensic Glass Analysis Bertino, Forensic Science Fundamentals of Investigation, pp.394 * Bertino, Forensic Science Fundamental of Investigation pp.397 * Saferstein ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Forensic Glass Analysis


1
Forensic Glass Analysis
2
Pre- assessment
  • When you pick up a clear object, how do you
    determine if the object is glass?

3
Unit Overview
  • People have been producing and improving upon
    glass for hundreds of years. Because glass is
    found throughout our homes, in vehicles, and even
    on ourselves, crime scenes often contain glass
    evidence.

4
Unit Overview
  • Most often the composition of glass is unique and
    therefore identifiable.
  • In science what type of properties are we
    referring and give two examples?

5
Physical vs. Chemical Properties
  • The forensic scientist must constantly determine
    those properties that impart distinguishing
    characteristics to matter, giving it a unique
    identity.
  • Glass can be identified by the compounds used to
    make it, its density, and also by its refractive
    index.

6
The Nature of Matter
  • What is the nature of matter?
  • What is matter?
  • What is an element?

7
The Nature of Matter
  • Matter is anything that has a mass and occupies
    space.
  • An element is the simplest substance known and
    provides the building block from which all matter
    is composed.

8
The Nature of Matter
  • All of the elements are listed by name and symbol
    in the periodic table.
  • Two or more elements combine to form a compound.
  • An atom is the basic particle of an element and a
    molecule is the smallest unit of a compound.

9
Physical vs. Chemical Properties
  • Physical properties such as weight, volume,
    color, boiling point, and melting point describe
    a substance without reference to any other
    substance.
  • A chemical property describes the behavior of a
    substance when it reacts or combines with another
    substance.

10
Physical vs. Chemical Properties
  • Light waves travel in air at a constant velocity
    until they penetrate another medium, such as
    glass or water, at which point they are suddenly
    slowed, causing the rays to bend.

11
Particle Nature of Light
  • Light also behaves as a particle
  • In 1900, the German physicist Max Planck
    (18581947) began searching for an explanation.
  • That is, while light has wavelike
    characteristics, it also can be a stream of tiny
    particles, or bundles of energy, called photons

12
Electrons Light
  • Light (electromagnetic radiation) is a form of
    energy - it acts like a wave and a particle
  • Caused by exciting electrons jumping energy
    levels and then returning to original energy
    level
  • We see different colors of light (wavelengths)
    depending on how many energy levels electrons
    move and the amount of energy they possess

13
Electromagnetic Spectrum
14
Physical vs. Chemical Properties
  • The bending of light waves because of a change in
    velocity is called refraction.
  • Refractive index is the ratio of the velocity of
    light in a vacuum to that in the medium under
    examination.

15
Physical Properties
  • Density of glass varies
  • Sink-Float Method
  • CHBr3, C2H2Br4, Sodium Polytungstate
  • Density Range
  • 2.465-2.540 g/cm3

16
Introduction and History of Glass
  • Egypt circa 2500 B.C.The earliest known
    human-made glass objects (beads)
  • 1st Century B.C.glass blowing begins
  • 13th Centuryspecialized glass production was an
    art, a science, and a state secret in the
    republic of Venice

17
Introduction and History of Glass
  • 14th Centuryglass-making spreads through Europe
  • The industrial revolution applies mass production
    to many types of glass
  • Analysis of glass found at a crime scene can
    yield trace evidence

18
What is Glass?
  • The melting together of sand and a few other
    compounds at very high temperatures forms most
    glass.

19
What is Glass?
  • Glass is an amorphous solid usually made from
    silica, calcium oxide, and sodium oxide.
  • Silicas chemical name is silicon dioxide

20
What Is Glass?
  • Crystalline solids have a regular atomic
    structure
  • Glass is an amorphous solid and so has an
    irregular atomic structure
  • Therefore, glass breaks in a variety of fracture
    patterns

21
What is Glass?
  • One of the earliest forms of man-made glass was
    accidentally produced in Syria during food
    preparation.
  • Metal oxides added to glass produce glass of
    different colors.

22
What is Glass?
  • What state of matter is glass?

23
What is glass?
  • Some people say that glass is a liquid because it
    flows over time. They note that glass in very
    old church windows is thicker at the bottom of
    the pane than at the top, claiming that the glass
    has flowed to the bottom. In actuality, when
    placed into windows, the panes were installed
    with the heavier, thicker side at the bottom.

24
The States of Matter
  • Matter can be classified according to the
    physical form it takes.
  • Solid-definite shape and volume
  • Liquid-specific volume, takes the shape of its
    container
  • Gas/vapor-neither a definite shape nor volume

25
The States of Matter
  • Substances can change from one phase to another
    without forming a new chemical species, matter is
    simply being changed from physical state to
    another.
  • Whenever a situation exists in which a substance
    can be distinguished by a visible boundary,
    different phases exist.

26
Types of Glass
  • Some types of glass are made with specific
    characteristics, such as glass for cooking and
    laboratory use, that make the glass withstand a
    wide range of temperatures.
  • Glass used in vehicle wind shields have been
    created to not break apart when hit.

27
Types of Glass
  • Obsidian volcanic glass
  • Leaded glass glass containing lead oxide
  • There are mainly six basic types of glass. See
    Types of Glass handout

28
Types of Glass
  • Many types of glass
  • Adding metal oxides yields different colors
  • Different densities
  • Refraction indexes
  • These characteristics allow comparisons

29
How is glass used by Forensic Scientist?
  • By analyzing the fracture patterns that form when
    glass is hit, forensic investigators can
    determine what object hit the glass and from
    which direction the object came.

30
How is glass used by Forensic Scientist?
  • Glass evidence is considered class evidence,
    because it is mass-produced and a particular
    piece of glass is not unique.
  • However if pieces of glass from suspect to
    reconstruct perfectly into a whole object, this
    is a match.

31
Different glasses-domestic windows, car
headlamps, light bulb glass-are produced
differently from different chemistries.
32
  • Safety glass is made so it will not crack and not
    break apart into pieces upon impact.

33
Refractive Index
  • When a beam of light moves from one medium into
    another
  • The speed changes
  • The direction bends
  • Refractive Indexa tool used to study how light
    bends as it passes from one substance to another
  • Normal line is perpendicular to the glass surface

34
Refractive Index
  • When a beam of light moves from less dense
    medium (air) into a more dense medium (water)
  • Its speed slows, and
  • Bends light toward the normal line

35
Snells Law
N1.52
N1.33
The higher the n, the more the light bends
36
Refractive Index
  • When a beam of light moves from a more dense
    medium (glass) into a less denser medium (air)
  • Its speed increases
  • And bends light away from the normal line

37
Application of Refractive Index to Forensics
  • Submersion methodused when glass fragments
    found at the crime scene are small

38
Application of Refractive Index to Forensics
  • Place the glass fragment into different liquids
    of known refractive indexes
  • The glass fragment will seem to disappear when
    placed in a liquid of the same refractive index

39
Application of Refractive Index to Forensics
  • Becke Linea halo-like effect appearing at the
    edges of a glass fragment when the reflective
    index of the glass and liquid are different
  • If the line is inside the glass perimeter, the
    glass index is higher than the index of the
    liquid
  • If the line is outside the glass perimeter, the
    glass index is lower

40
Becke Lines
Glass has higher refractive index-note white line
inside
  • Glass has lower refractive index-note white line
    outside

41
Fracture Patterns inBroken Glass
  • Being an amorphous solid, glass will not break
    into regular pieces with straight line fractures
  • Fracture patterns provide clues about the
    direction, rate, and sequence of the impacts

42
Why Radial and Concentric Fractures Form
  • Impacted glass is compressed on the side it is
    hit.
  • It will stretch on the opposite side of the
    glass, and the tension there will radiate breaks
    in the glass outward from the point of impact.
  • Then fractures form in the shape of concentric
    circles on the same side of the impact.

43
Why Radial and Concentric Fractures Form
  • Glass after an impact shows radial fractures
    (red) and concentric circle fractures (blue)

44
Why Radial and Concentric Fractures Form
45
Bullet Fractures
  • As a bullet passes through glass, it pushes a
    cone shaped piece of glass out of the glass ahead
    of it
  • The exit side of the hole is larger than the
    entrance side of the hole
  • Radiating fracture lines from a subsequent shot
    will stop at the edge of the fracture lines
    already present in the glass

46
Path of a Bullet Passing through Window Glass
perpendicular to the glass
shot from the right
shot from the left
  • The angles at which bullets enter window glass
    help locate the position of the shooter
  • Bits of the glass can fly backward (backscatter),
    creating trace evidence

47
Blunt Object Fractures
  • Glass fractures caused by a blunt object will
    show a pattern of fractures but not as regular of
    a pattern as the fractures from a bullet
  • The difference is due to the impacting force
    being dispersed over a greater area.

48
Blunt Object Fractures
49
Heat Fractures
  • Wave shaped
  • No regular pattern of radial or concentric lines
  • Show little if any curve patterns along the edges
  • Expansion of glass occurs first on the side
    exposed to the heat

50
Heat Fractures
51
Handling of Crime Scene Glass Samples
  1. Identify and photograph any glass samples before
    moving them.
  2. Collect the largest fragments that can be
    reasonably collected.
  3. Identify the outside and inside surface of any
    glass.
  4. If multiple panes are involved, make a diagram.
  5. Note trace evidence such as skin, hair, blood, or
    fibers.
  6. Package all materials collected to maintain the
    chain of custody.
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