What does forensic chemistry analyze?
ex: fibres, paint, glass, arson, explosives
What types of crimes does forensic chemistry cover?
What are the 5 steps for analysis?
What are 5 types of non-destructive analysis?
What is chromatography? List and describe the different types
What is spectrophotometry?
How is significance evaluated?
What are the two types of fibres?
2. manmade - synthesized or originate from natural materials (made of polymers)
How are fibres examined?
What dictates the significance of a fibre?
location found, number and nature of fibres examined
Where can paint be found?
transportation - cars, bikes, boats, planes
household objects - walls, doors, window frames, paintings
What are some methods of paint examination?
What are the 4 layers of car paint? How can it be used as class evidence?
- can match paint in database down to make, model, and year (PDQ)
How is glass examined?
What are 3 things fire investigators are responsible for at a fire scene?
Why are fire crime scenes more complex than regular crime scenes?
- scene is destroyed by fire then water (destroy evidence of accelerants)
What is the role of a forensic chemist for a fire scene?
What are the 3 components of fire?
List 6 things fire investigators need to look for/determine at a fire scene
How are samples collected from a fire scene?
Describe flame over and flashover
flame over:
- unburned fuel from originating fire has accumulated in ceiling layer and ignites and burns
flashover:
- surfaces exposed to thermal radiation reach ignition temps at the same time leading to full room involvement
What are the disadvantages of flashover?
- obscures fire origin and consequently the cause
What is an explosion? How does it differ from a fire?
List and describe the 3 effects of an explosion