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Analysis of Glass- Glass Evidence

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Title: Analysis of Glass- Glass Evidence


1
Analysis of Glass- Glass Evidence
  • Chapter 4 Properties of Matter and the Analysis
    of Glass

2
Glass evidence can be found at many crime scenes.
  • Automobile accident sites may be littered with
    broken headlight or windshield glass.
  • The site of a store break-in may contain shards
    of window glass with fibers or blood on them.
  • If shots are fired into a window, the sequence
    and direction of the bullets can often be
    determined by examining the glass.
  • Minute particles of glass may be transferred to a
    suspects shoes or clothing and can provide a
    source of trace evidence linking a suspect to a
    crime.

3
How is glass formed?
  • Long before humans began making glass, glass
    formed naturally.
  • When certain types of rock are exposed to
    extremely high temperatures, such as lightning
    strikes or erupting volcanoes, glass can form.
  • Obsidian is a type of glass formed by volcanoes.

4
Timeline of Events
  • Prehistoric humans used obsidian as a cutting
    tool.
  • The earliest man-made glass objects (glass beads)
    were found in Egypt dating back to 2500 BC.
  • Glass blowing began sometime during the first
    century BC.
  • By the 14th century, knowledge of glass making
    spread throughout Europe.
  • The Industrial Revolution brought the mass
    production of many kinds of glass.

5
How is Glass Formed?
  • Glass is a hard, brittle, amorphous material made
    by melting sand (aka silica,silicon dioxide,
    SiO2) lime (aka calcium oxide CaO) and soda,
    sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) at very high
    temperatures.
  • The lime (CaO) is added to prevent the glass from
    being soluble in water.
  • The soda (Na2CO3) is added to lower the melting
    point of silica (sand) and make it easier to work
    with.

6
Soda-lime Glass (amorphous solid)The atoms are
arranged in a random fashion
7
Types of Glass
  • Soda-lime glass Mostly sand, sodium carbonate
    and calcium oxide
  • Used for manufacturing most window and bottle
    glass

8
Float Glass
  • Flat glass typically used for windows.
  • Soda-lime glass that has been cooled on top of a
    bath of molten tin.

9
Borosilicates
  • The common metal-oxides found in soda-lime glass
    are sodium, calcium, magnesium and aluminum.
  • In addition, a wide variety of special glasses
    can be made by substituting in whole or in part
    other metal oxides for the silica, sodium and
    calcium oxides.
  • Automobile headlights, heat-resistant glass such
    as Pyrex are manufactured by adding Boron oxide
    to the oxide mix
  • Lab glassware, thermometers, cookware.

10
Leaded Glass
  • Fine glassware and decorative art glass, called
    crystal or leaded glass substitutes lead oxide
    for calcium oxide (lime).
  • The addition of lead oxide makes the glass
    denser. As light passes through the more-dense
    glass, the light waves are bent, giving the glass
    a sparkling effect.

11
Tempered Glass
  • This glass is made stronger than ordinary window
    glass by introducing stress through rapid heating
    and cooling of the glass surfaces.
  • When tempered glass breaks, it does not shatter
    but rather fragments or dices into small
    squares with litter splintering.
  • Used for side and rear windows of automobiles
    sold in the United States.

12
Laminated Glass
  • This glass derives its strength by sandwiching
    one layer of plastic between two pieces of
    ordinary window glass.
  • The windshields of all cars manufactured in the
    United States are constructed from laminated
    glass.

13
Bulletproof Glass
  • Bulletproof glass is a combination of two or more
    types of glass, one hard and one soft.
  • The softer layer makes the glass more elastic so
    it can flex instead of shatter.
  • The index of refraction for both of the glasses
    used in the bulletproof layers must be almost the
    same to keep the glass transparent and allow a
    clear view through the glass.
  • Bulletproof glass varies in thickness from
    three-quarter inch to three inches.

14
Properties of Glass and Comparing Glass Fragments
  • For the forensic scientist, comparing glass
    consists of finding and measuring the properties
    that will associate one glass fragment with
    another while minimizing or eliminating the
    possible existence of other sources.
  • Considering the prevalence of glass in our
    society, it is easy to appreciate the magnitude
    of this analytical problem.
  • Obviously, glass possesses its greatest
    evidential value when it can be individualized to
    one source.

15
Jigsaw Effect Most Beneficial
  • When the suspect and crime-scene fragments are
    assembled and physically fitted together.
  • Comparisons of this type require piecing together
    irregular edges of broken glass as well as
    matching all irregularities and striations on the
    broken surfaces. The possibility that two pieces
    of glass originating from different sources will
    fit together exactly is so unlikely as to exclude
    all other sources from practical consideration.
  • Unfortunately, most glass evidence is either too
    fragmentary or too minute to permit a comparison
    of this type

16
Density and Refractive Index
  • The physical properties of density and refractive
    index are used most successfully for
    characterizing glass particles.
  • These properties are class characteristics which
    can not provide the sole criteria for
    individualizing glass to a common source.
  • These properties do give the analyst sufficient
    data to evaluate the significance of a glass
    comparison, and the absence of comparable density
    and refractive index values will certainly
    exclude glass fragments that originate from
    different sources.

17
Measuring and Comparing Density
  • Each type of glass has a density that is specific
    to that glass. One method of matching glass
    fragments is by density comparison.
  • Density (D) is calculated by dividing the mass
    (m) of a substance by its volume (V). The
    formula for calculating density can be written as
    D m
  • V

18
Comparing Densities Flotation
  • A solid particle will either float, sink, or
    remain suspended in a liquid, depending upon its
    density relative to the liquid medium.
  • Flotation a standard / reference glass particle
    is immersed in a liquid a mixture of bromoform
    or bromobenzene may be used. The composition of
    the liquid is carefully adjusted by adding small
    amounts of bromoform or bromobenzene until the
    glass chip remains suspended in the liquid
    medium. At this point, the standard / reference
    glass sample and the liquid each have the same
    density. Glass chips (same size and shape as
    reference sample) are added to the liquid for
    comparison. If both the unknown and standard /
    reference samples remain suspended, they have the
    same density.

19
Flotation
20
Refractive Index
  • Refractive Index
  • When light travels from one medium to another its
    speed changes relative to the density of the
    medium. This can be observed as the light bends
    when traveling from one medium to another.

21
Refractive Index
22
Index of Refraction (Refractive Index)
  • The speed of light in a vacuum is always the
    same,
  • but when light moves through any other medium it
    travels more slowly since it is constantly being
    absorbed and reemitted by the atoms in the
    material.
  • The ratio of the speed of light in a vacuum to
    the speed of light in another substance is
    defined as the index of refraction (aka
    refractive index or n) for the substance.

23
Methods for Determining Refractive Index
  • The FBI has a database off over 2000 refractive
    indexes of different types of glass which shows
    that glass is very distinctive and helps assign
    an appropriate statistical probability that the
    two pieces of glass share a common source.

24
Snells Law
  • Snells Law describes the behavior of light as it
    travels from one medium into a different medium.
    Snells law can be written as
  • n1 (sine angle 1) n2 (sine angle 2)
  • n1 is the refractive index of medium 1 and n2 is
    the refractive index of medium 2. Angle 1 is the
    angle of incidence and angle 2 is the angle of
    refraction. BOTH angles are measured relative to
    the normal or line drawn perpendicular to the
    surfaces where the two medium meet.

25
Determining and Comparing Refractive Index
  • Submersion method Place glass fragment into
    different liquids of known refractive indexes.
    If a piece of glass and a liquid have the same
    refractive index, the glass fragment will seem to
    disappear when placed in the liquid.
  • Submersion and Low Power of Microscope. Submerge
    fragment of glass in a liquid and then view it
    under low power using a compound microscope. If
    the refractive index (n) of the liquid medium is
    different from the refractive index of the piece
    of glass, a halo-like ring appears around the
    edge of the glass. This halo-like effect is
    called a Becke line.
  • The Becke line appears because the refracted
    light becomes concentrated around the edges of
    the glass fragment A Becke line is visible under
    a microscope when the glass and liquid have
    different refractive indexes.

26
Becke line
27
Becke line
  • If the Becke line is located inside the perimeter
    of the glass fragment, than the refractive index
    of the glass is higher than the refractive index
    of the surrounding liquid.
  • If the Becke line is located on the outside
    perimeter of the glass fragment, than the
    refractive index of the surrounding medium is
    higher than the refractive index of the glass.

28
Becke line Indication of Refractive Index
  • Notice the halo of light on the inside perimeter
    of the glass sample.
  • When the Becke line is inside the perimeter of
    the glass fragment, the refractive index of the
    glass is higher than the refractive index of the
    surrounding medium.

29
Becke line Indication of Refractive Index
  • Notice the halo of light (Becke line) is outside
    the perimeter of the glass fragment.
  • When the Becke line is outside the perimeter of
    the glass sample, the refractive index of the
    medium is higher than the refractive index of the
    glass.

30
Annealing
  • When trying to make a distinction between
    tempered glass and nontempered glass particles a
    process known as annealing is used.
  • Annealing- slowly heating and then cooling the
    glass. A heat treatment that alters the
    microstructure of a material causing changes in
    properties such as strength and hardness ...
  • The change in the refractive index value for
    tempered glass upon annealing is significantly
    greater when compared to nontempered glass and
    thus serves as a point of distinction.

31
Fracture Patterns in Broken Glass
  • Glass has some flexibility. When glass is hit,
    it can stretch slightly.
  • When glass is forced to stretch too far, fracture
    lines appear and the glass may break.
  • The fracture patterns on broken glass can provide
    clues about the direction and rate of impact.

32
Primary Radial Fractures
  • When glass breaks, fracture patterns form on the
    surface.
  • Breaks, called primary radial fractures, are
    produced.
  • These fractures start at the point of impact and
    radiate (like spokes on a wheel) outward from
    there.
  • Radial fractures form on the side opposite the
    point of impact.

33
Secondary Fractures
  • Secondary fractures may also form.
  • These fractures take the form of concentric
    circles around the point of impact.
  • Concentric circles are circles that have the same
    center.
  • Concentric circles form on the same side of the
    glass as the point of impact.

34
Analyzing Glass Fracture Patterns
35
3 R Rule- Determining Side of Impact
  • Radial Cracks form a Right Angle on the Reverse
    side of the force.

36
3R Rule
  • Radial cracks are at Right angles to the Rear
    (side opposite theimpact)
  • Exceptions
  • tempered glassdices without forming
    ridgesvery small windows held tightly in
    framecant bend or bulge appreciably
  • windows broken by heat or explosionno point
    of impact

37
Successive Penetrations of Glass
  • When there have been successive penetrations of
    glass, it is frequently possible to determine the
    sequence of impact by observing the existing
    fracture lines and their points of termination.
  • A fracture always terminates at an existing line
    of fracture.

38
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39
Breakage of Glass from a Fire
  • During a fire, glass may break as a result of
    heat fracturing.
  • Heat fracturing produces breakage patterns on
    glass that are different from breakage patterns
    caused by impact.
  • Wavy fracture lines develop in glass that has
    been exposed to high heat.
  • Glass will tend to break toward the region of
    higher temperature.
  • If the glass was not broken before the fire,
    there will be no radial or concentric circle
    fracture patterns in glass that is broken by high
    heat.

40
Proper Collection of Glass Evidence
  • Standard reference glass should be taken from the
    crime scene (1 in2)
  • Package in solid containers to prevent breakage
  • Preserve garment (shoe, pants, shirt) with glass
    on it
  • All broken glass must be recovered and submitted
    for analysis when direction of impact is desired.
  • Whenever possible, the exterior and interior
    surfaces of the glass must be indicated. The
    presence of dirt, paint, grease or putty may
    indicate the exterior surface of the glass.
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