READ: Glass and Soil Evidence
Glass Evidence
Properties of Glass Evidence
Glass evidence is commonly encountered at a crime scene; especially those involving a burglary or a hit and run car accident. For example, broken glass at a crime scene can be used to place a suspect at the crime scene or may become lodged in the shoes or garments of a victim of a hit and run and matched to a certain vehicle. When glass evidence is available, it is typically examined for its physical properties. While glass itself can't be linked to an individual source in most cases, it can contain other types of evidence which are individual evidence such as fingerprints, blood or hair! Glass evidence can also often be linked back to a common source by a combination of density, refractive index and any production or other irregularities on the surface of the glass.
Types of Glass Interactivity
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Forensic Comparison
The use of glass evidence relies on the investigator's ability to match glass from an unknown source to a crime scene. Chemical analysis is usually not unique enough to accomplish this task so the focus is to associate one kind of glass with another while minimizing or eliminating other possible sources. The easiest way to accomplish this is when glass fragments can be pieced together with matching irregularities; similar to putting pieces of a puzzle together. If the pieces can be put back together; the original shape and dimensions of the piece of glass may be determined.
Glass is also compared on the basis of certain physical characteristics; namely those are glass color, thickness, fluorescence, curvature, surface characteristics, density and index of refraction.
Color
Color is typically observed visually with the glass fragments against a white background in natural light. Glass fragments of the same size are typically placed side by side for color comparison.
Thickness
Thickness is measured when glass fragments have both sides of their original surfaces. A small tool such as a caliper or micrometer is used to measure the thickness of the glass. Glass thicknesses are kept in a database for Forensic comparisons and are generally the same in various types of glass within one thousandth of an inch! The thickness of the glass is due to the materials used to make the glass and the method in which it is made. If it is not kept at a uniform thickness, the glass will be irregular with ripples which lessens the value of the glass when sold.
Fluorescence
Fluorescence of glass is caused by either materials added to the glass such as Uranium in a certain type of green glass, or the process in which it is produced such as the method of producing float glass in which liquid glass is poured into molten tin. The tin will cause the glass to fluoresce in UV light on the surfaces in which the tin touched the liquid glass. Fluorescence of glass is evaluated by shining UV light on the glass.
Curvature
Curvature of glass refers to whether or not the glass is flat or curved into shapes such as containers or glass lenses. The curvature of a lens can be evaluated using low-power magnification.
The surface characteristics of glass can vary greatly and be quite useful in an examination of glass evidence. Some examples of surface characteristics include scratches, decorative etching, roller marks from production, polish marks, frosting of the glass and coatings on the glass. Most of these surface characteristics can be observed and evaluated with the naked eye or stereoscopic Microscope. Some evaluations, such as those involving coatings on glass, require more intensive methods such as Transmission Electron Microscopy.
Density
Density of glass, as discussed earlier, can be determined in several ways including calculation or a special method known as the flotation method. The flotation method is a quick and easy method for comparing glass densities. Glass particles are immersed in a liquid; the density of the liquid is adjusted until one or more glass particles remain suspended in the liquid. When the glass is suspended, it has the same density as the liquid and the density can then be inferred from the liquid. The comparison pieces of glass will either suspend, float or sink depending on their density relative to the liquid. One form of analysis that uses the principles of the floatation method is the Density Gradient Column that was mentioned earlier. Remember that density is an intensive property, so the density of a glass fragment will remain the same no matter how many times it is broken into pieces. This is why glass fragments can be reliably matched using their densities.
Glass Fractures
When a force is applied to one side of glass, the elastic property of the glass will allow it to bend to a certain degree. When the force surpasses the limits the glass can withstand, cracks will form. These cracks are characterized as radial fractures or concentric fractures.
Radial, or primary fractures are cracks in the glass which radiate outward from the point of impact. These cracks form on the opposite side of the impact and radiate outward like spokes on a wheel.
Concentric, or secondary fractures, are fractures that form an approximately circular pattern around the point of impact. These fractures always form on the same side as the point of impact.
Examining the edges of radial and concentric fractures can help investigators determine the rate of impact and the direction that a projectile was travelling as it passed through the glass.
Radial fractures follow the 3R Rule, which means that Radial Cracks form a Right Angle on the Reverse side of the force.
When more than one projectile or object has impacted the glass, it is often possible to determine which impact occurred first as well as the order of the subsequent impacts. New fractures will always terminate at an existing line of fracture because the stress placed on the glass (causing it to crack) will be transferred along the existing crack rather than across it. The crack line of the first impact will, in effect, stop the crack line of the second impact from crossing. Finding where this occurs will give you information as to which impact occurred first. In the image you can see in the red circle that impact A occurred first because the radial fracture from impact B was stopped by the radial fracture in impact A.
It is hard to determine if glass was broken by a bullet or some other projectile. One thing that can be determined is the direction the projectile traveled. This is because the hole that forms in the glass will be cone shaped with the exit side always appearing larger than the entry side.
Georgia Virtual, Forensic Properties of Glass and Soil Evidence, CC BY-NC-SA 3.0