DIY LED-photometer With Arduino For Physics or Chemistry Lessons - 5 Steps (With Pictures) - Instructables
DIY LED-photometer With Arduino For Physics or Chemistry Lessons - 5 Steps (With Pictures) - Instructables
Hello!
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This measurement is repeated with differently colored LEDs and determines in each case T or A as
a function of the wavelength (color). If you do this with enough LEDs, you get an absorption curve.
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* 6 resistors with 100, 1k, 10k, 100k, 1M and 10M ohms: ebay resistors
* a switch: switch
The circuit for the photometer is very simple. It consists of a photodiode, an operational amplifier, a
voltage-inverter and some other parts (resistors, switches, capacitors). The principle of this type of
circuit is to convert the (low) current from the photodiode into a higher voltage, which can be read
by the arduino nano. The multiplication-factor is determined by the value of the resistor in the
feedback of the OPA. To be more flexible I took 6 different resistors, which can be chosen with the
rotary switch. The lowest "magnification" is 100, the highest 10 000 000. Everything is powered by
a single 9V battery.
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I bought the different colored LEDs from Roithner Lasertechnik which is located in austria, my
home country. For these, the respective wavelength is given in nanometers. To be really sure one
can check the dominant wavelength with a spectroscope and the Theremino software (theremino
spectrometer). In my case, the data in nm agreed with the measurements quite good. When
selecting the LEDs, you should achieve as even coverage of the wavelength range from 395nm to
850nm.
For the first experiment with the photometer I chose chlorophyll. But for this you’ll have to pluck
grass from a meadow hoping that no one is watching you ...
This grass is then cut into small pieces and put together with propanol or ethanol in a pot. Now you
crush the leaves with a mortar or a fork. After a few minutes, the chlorophyll has dissolved nicely in
the propanol. This solution is still too strong. It needs to be diluted with sufficient propanol. And to
avoid any suspended the solution has to be filtered. I took a common coffee-filter.
The result should look like as shown in the picture. A very translucent green-yellowish solution.
Then you repeat the measurement (U0, U) with each LED. As it can be seen from the obtained
absorption curve, theory and measurement agree quite well. Chlorophyll a + b absorbs very
strongly in the blue and red spectral range, while green-yellow and infrared light can penetrate the
solution almost unhindered. In the infrared range, the absorption is even close to zero.
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If one applies E as a function of the concentration c, we would expect to obtain a rising straight line
through the zero point.
As you can see from my extinction curve, it is not linear. At higher concentrations, it flattens,
specifically from concentrations greater than 0.25. This means that the extinction is lower than
would be expected according to the Lambert-Beer law. However, considering only lower
concentrations, for example between 0 and 0.25, results in a very nice linear relationship between
the concentration c and the extinction E. In this range, the unknown concentration c can be
determined from the measured extinction E. In my case, the concentration has only arbitrary units,
since I have not determined the initial amount of dissolved potassium permanganate (it has been
only milligrams, which couldn’t be measured with my kitchen-scale in my case, dissolved in 4 ml
water for the starting solution).
Step 5: Conclusions
This photometer is particularly suitable for physics and chemistry lessons.
The total cost is only around 60 Euro = 70 USD. The different colored LEDs are the most
expensive part. On ebay or aliexpress you will certainly find cheaper LEDs but usually you do not
know which wavelengths the LEDs have. Seen in this way, purchasing from a specialist retailer is
recommended.
In this lesson you learn something about the relation between the colour of liquids and their
absorption-behavior, about the important Chlorophyll, the Lambert-Beer law, exponentials,
transmission and absorption, calculation of percents and the wavelengths of the visible colours. I
think this is quite a lot...
So have fun also making this project in your lesson and Eureka!
Last but not least I'd be very happy if you could vote for me in the classroom-science-contest.
Thank's for that...
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