The aim of this blog is to create prior art for a dispersive rotating prism spectrometer.
My inspiration here comes from Jerry de Vos. Jerry de Vos is working on a plastic scanner. This project aims to develop a simple handheld scanner that can detect five different types of plastic.
At its core, it contains a photodiode and 8 leds emmiting specific wavelengths2 of near-infrared light. By flashing each LED individually onto a plastic sample and measuring it's reflectance with the photodiode, we obtain its (discrete) reflectance spectra.
Like Hackaday, I am sceptical of the project. Jerry has been able to reach a large audience.
Let's look at a dispersive infrared spectrometer:
Broadly speaking, all optical spectrometers consist of an entrance slit (1), a diffraction grating or prism (2), a detector (3), and routing optics (4). The entrance slit allows light into the spectrometer, where a system of mirrors or lenses routes it first onto a diffraction grating or prism, and then onto the detector. The grating or prism splits the light into its constituent wavelength components, and the detector records the light intensity as a function of wavelength. If the spectrometer has a large spectral range, it may also have filters to stop higher order light from reaching the sensor (source).
A prism where opposing sides are not parallel refracts lights as follows. Key here is that each wavelength is refracted differently, due to dispersion.
typically more disperse and deemed undesired for my application.
I am not aware of a dispersive spectrometer where the prism is rotated.
As such, I claim a device used for spectrometry where the prism has uneven sides and is rotated.
As application domain, I claim all the uses of spectrometers prior to march 10 2023.
As shown on this blog, I claim the prism is rotated using a PCB motor or BLDC motor.
Furthermore, I claim the position of the prism is tracked using hall sensors and or optically via a laser or led.
The laser is incident onto the prism on any from the sides. Its reflection is captured by a photo diode and used to monitor the position the prism is in.
Light is shined onto the sample by an external source. Preferably this has a broad spectrum and uniform angle of incidence. The spectrum and the angle of incidence need to be known. One could collimate the light source or use multiple light sources.
A slit or lens might be used to get the light into the spectrometer and ensure a certain angle of incidence.
A slit might further be used to narrow the detection by the detector, used to detect the incident light.
There are a couple of nice things of this technique. The prism can be made really small. Prisms of 1 mm size exist.
The prism could also have three unequal angles so that each sides works slightly different.
There are a lot of complexities; rotating the prism, developing an algorithm to collect the data and making it cheap.
These have been solved by the open hardware laser prism scanner project.
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