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Trace Evidence: Fiber
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Trace Evidence: Fiber. 2 Copyright © Texas Education Agency 2011. All rights reserved. Images and other multimedia content used with permission. Copyright.

Jan 19, 2016

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Page 1: Trace Evidence: Fiber. 2 Copyright © Texas Education Agency 2011. All rights reserved. Images and other multimedia content used with permission. Copyright.

Trace Evidence: Fiber

Page 2: Trace Evidence: Fiber. 2 Copyright © Texas Education Agency 2011. All rights reserved. Images and other multimedia content used with permission. Copyright.

2Copyright © Texas Education Agency 2011. All rights reserved.Images and other multimedia content used with permission. 

Copyright and Terms of Service

Copyright © Texas Education Agency, 2011. These materials are copyrighted © and trademarked ™ as the property of the Texas Education Agency (TEA) and may not be reproduced without the express written permission of TEA, except under the following conditions:

1)  Texas public school districts, charter schools, and Education Service Centers may reproduce and use copies of the Materials and Related Materials for the districts’ and schools’ educational use without obtaining permission from TEA.

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Contact TEA Copyrights with any questions you may have.

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• Used in forensic science to create a link between a crime and a suspect.

• Considered to be CLASS EVIDENCE because they are mass produced.

• Sensitive evidence – 95% of all fibers may be lost within 24 hours.

• Only the fibers you would not expect to find are investigated.– Example: pink fibers found all over the victim’s body found on a

pink carpet vs. pink fibers found on a suspect’s pants

Fibers

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• Fibers can originate from many sources:– Carpet– Clothing– Linen– Furniture– Insulation– Rope/ligature– Tape

Sources

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Two Types of Fibers

• Natural– derived from plants or animal hair

• Synthetic– manmade

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Natural Fibers: Animal Fibers•Sheep (wool)•most common; the end use is often determined by coarseness• fine wool fibers are used for clothing, while coarse wool fibers are used in carpeting

•Goat (mohair, cashmere)•Camel (wool)•Llama•Alpaca (wool)•Fur fibers from mink, rabbit, beaver, etc.•Silk (fiber from the cocoon of the silkworm)

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Natural Fibers: Plant Fibers

• Cotton (ribbon-like shape with irregular twists; most common)• Flax (Linen)• Ramie• Sisal (often used in linen rugs)• Jute (used in ropes)• Hemp (the common name for cannabis for industrial or non-

drug use; typically used for rope or sack)• Kapok (fiber from kapok tree seed pods; used in pillows and

mattress stuffing)• Coir (coconut husks; used in carpet, rugs)

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Synthetic FibersMore than half of all fibers used in the production of textile materials are manmade.• Polyester (most common; wrinkle resistant; often spun with

cotton)• Nylon (very common; elastic and strong; lustrous and silk-like

when stretched)• Acrylics (wool-like, soft and warm; quick drying and resistant

to moths)• Rayon (cellulose-derived, regenerated, thin fiber)• Acetates (cellulosed-based, wrinkle-resistant fiber)

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Special Fibers

• Aramid fiber is a light, but strong, synthetic fiber. • Heat-resistant aramid fiber is typically used for bullet-

proof vests, military applications, and racing tires• Fire-resistant aramid fiber is used for firemen or disaster

response teams.

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• Fiber – a fine, slender piece of thread or filament

• Yarn – a twisted aggregate of fibers

• Textiles – woven fibers; fabrics

Types of Fibers

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Lengthwise threads (the warp) are woven by crosswise threads (the weft) in a pattern.

Common Weave Patterns

• Plain (firm, tends to wrinkle)

• Basket (not very durable, shrinks when washed)

• Satin (not durable, shiny surface)

• Twill (very strong, dense and compact, soft)

• Leno (open weave, easily distorted)

Weaving

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Fiber Comparisons

• Microscopic Comparisons

• Color

• Diameter

• Surface markings

• Delustering agents

• Cross-sectional shape

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• Polarized Light Microscopy – determines birefringence (difference between two refractive indices) using polarized light

Fiber Comparisons (continued)

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• Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR) – analysis of a fiber’s chemical composition based on its ability to absorb light at different wavelengths

Fiber Comparisons (continued)

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• UV-Visible Microspectrophotometry – distinguishes slight/subtle color differences based on absorption of light at different wavelengths

Fiber Comparisons (continued)

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Two Possible Conclusions in Fiber Comparisons

• The Questioned fiber could have originated from the Known sample.

• The Questioned fiber did not originate from the Known source.

• The number of fibers is directly proportional to the likelihood of actual contact (i.e., the greater the number of fibers, the more likely that contact actually occurred.)

Significance of Fiber Evidence

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Greater number of fiber types

More unique the material

Greater significance

Significance of Fiber Evidence(continued)

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Resources

• Saferstein, Richard. Forensic Science: An Introduction. New Jersey: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2008.

• Saferstein, Richard. Criminalistics: An Introduction to Forensic Science. 8th ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2004.

• Saferstein, Richard. Forensic Science Handbook. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1982.

• Bertino, Anthony J. Forensic Science: Fundamentals and Investigations. Mason, OH: South-Western Cengage Learning, 2009.

18Copyright © Texas Education Agency 2011. All rights reserved.Images and other multimedia content used with permission.