There is a kit on soinc with fibers. Get it, then burn them and see what you can figure out!iheartscience wrote:SO I'm having a reaaly hard time identifying fibers, are there are tricks/tips?

EDIT: Misunderstanding in the wording fixed
There is a kit on soinc with fibers. Get it, then burn them and see what you can figure out!iheartscience wrote:SO I'm having a reaaly hard time identifying fibers, are there are tricks/tips?
Um.... I know that.... I'm pretty sure the video was burning fibers... I think they had a video with the density solutions for plastics, not sure. 1 year is too long to remember details of one website xDSkink wrote:No! Do NOT burn plastics! That releases carcinogens. They, like, kinda cause cancer. Burning is for fibers.
KingsRanger wrote:So we just finished up an Invitational and did terribly.
We had everything we needed for every possible substance, but absolutely NOTHING went right. One material was salt. We were sure it was salt...but no reaction to Iodine. We had a metal that had to be aluminum...had to be! But it couldn't be. Half the clues didn't suggest anybody at all, and the ones that did suggest somebody were evenly divisible so that there was one clue for each suspect. I just went ahead and wrote "the butler did it", since we had no idea who it could possibly be.
Any tips, any tips at all, would be helpful.
1) Salt doesn't react with iodine. The only thing iodine is good for is identifying cornstarch. 2) I would react metals with every reagent available to B Division and make an observations chart. 3) What helps with determining the perpetrator of the crime is going through and circling what incriminates people. This helps with specificity later on when you're analyzing all the evidence that you identified.
cupcakegirl wrote:Burn tests are allowed and the proctor should give you matches if they give you a fiber. However, like computergeek3 said, you can use a microscope to identify fibers, although burn tests are far easier. If you can, go for the burn test!ragi wrote:Hey guys I was wondering about how to identify sample fibers?![]()
![]()
Do we have to use the burn test or somethingg
Careful, bud. That is for section 3.b.iii. which is polymers. Burning plastics is a bad idea. That regulation only refers to plastics.theriddler wrote:In the rules for Division B, under Polymer Testing/Natural and Man-made Substances (part III) it says "No burn test allowed but burn results may be provided."