salukikev
Mechanical
- May 14, 2008
- 110
Hello,
On a project I am involved with, we are seeking to increase visual contrast/brightness in order to better distinguish objects of interest from background ambient light. There are two questions somewhat related to this task, and one involves consideration of band pass filters- of which I am only slightly familiar. Cost is a major element of this equation as this will be a retail product commonly available in your typical Walmart/Target. Current cost of this entire component assembly is around $.25 usd.
With that in mind- question 1 is whether there is a low cost (plastic) film material that can be manufactured in large quantity that will act to increase the apparent contrast or brightness when viewed through the filter. Similar to the diffusion gratings or tinted/semi-metallic acrylic plastics seen in sunglass lenses or the paper glasses for special effects. We wouldn't be concerned with clarity or scientific measure- we are merely concerned with the ability to distinguish fluorescing objects from the surrounding environment and reduce apparent ambient lighting in that pursuit.
Question 2:
With the same goal as the question above in mind, can a chemical be applied that would effectively act as a fluorescing catalyst? That is to say, not act as a typical fluorescing marker agent (flurophore) but rather as a non-or-low fluorescing agent that will cause a particular chemical to either fluoresce or amplify/differentiate the fluorescing output of a material?
If Q2 needs more explanation, consider this example: in a CSI-style crime investigation, suppose a detective is scanning a counter top in daytime with considerable ambient light. There is a small droplet of blood on this counter top. Can a chemical agent which is not just a dye be applied to the counter that will not fluoresce uniformly, but rather will react with the blood to increase its specific fluorescence/contrast?
Thanks for any help in either of these areas!
-kevin
On a project I am involved with, we are seeking to increase visual contrast/brightness in order to better distinguish objects of interest from background ambient light. There are two questions somewhat related to this task, and one involves consideration of band pass filters- of which I am only slightly familiar. Cost is a major element of this equation as this will be a retail product commonly available in your typical Walmart/Target. Current cost of this entire component assembly is around $.25 usd.
With that in mind- question 1 is whether there is a low cost (plastic) film material that can be manufactured in large quantity that will act to increase the apparent contrast or brightness when viewed through the filter. Similar to the diffusion gratings or tinted/semi-metallic acrylic plastics seen in sunglass lenses or the paper glasses for special effects. We wouldn't be concerned with clarity or scientific measure- we are merely concerned with the ability to distinguish fluorescing objects from the surrounding environment and reduce apparent ambient lighting in that pursuit.
Question 2:
With the same goal as the question above in mind, can a chemical be applied that would effectively act as a fluorescing catalyst? That is to say, not act as a typical fluorescing marker agent (flurophore) but rather as a non-or-low fluorescing agent that will cause a particular chemical to either fluoresce or amplify/differentiate the fluorescing output of a material?
If Q2 needs more explanation, consider this example: in a CSI-style crime investigation, suppose a detective is scanning a counter top in daytime with considerable ambient light. There is a small droplet of blood on this counter top. Can a chemical agent which is not just a dye be applied to the counter that will not fluoresce uniformly, but rather will react with the blood to increase its specific fluorescence/contrast?
Thanks for any help in either of these areas!
-kevin