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Fire Investigation

Published on Nov 19, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

FIRE INVESTIVATION

AUSTIN KENDRICK, BLOCK 5

CHEMISTRY OF FIRE

  • Fire is a type of oxidation
  • Must reach the ignition temperature to ignite fuel and start fire
  • Oxidation only takes place when the oxygen is in a gaseous state
  • Liquids burn at the flash point, when the temperature is high enough to vaporize it

CHEMISTRY OF FIRE (CONT.)

  • Solids burn through pyrolysis, in which the heat decomposes it into gaseous products
  • Glowing combustion (smoldering) is burning at the fuel air interface
  • Spontaneous combustion occurs when a natural heat producing process is held in a poorly ventilated container/area
  • Combustion needs: a fuel, a sufficient supply of oxygen, and applied heat

SEARCHING THE FIRE SCENE

  • Examination of a fire scene begins as soon as the fire is extinguished
  • Search focuses on finding the origin of the fire (which can help discover accelerants or ignition sources used)
  • Because fire tends to move upwards, the origin is typically the lowest point showing the most intense characteristics of burning

COLLECTION OF ARSON EVIDENCE

  • Ash, soot, and porous materials are collected from the origin
  • These are all stored in airtight containers
  • Control specimens are also collected
  • A search for igniters and for flammable liquid residues is conducted as well

ANALYSIS OF FLAMMABLE RESIDUES

  • Gas chromatography is the best method of identifying a flammable residue
  • The machine separates the hydrocarbon components and creates a chromatographic pattern
  • This pattern is compared to those from known petroleum products in order to identify the substance