The SpectraRad is a miniature TE Cooled spectral irradiance meter designed for industrial applications and lab use with a USB 2.0 interface. The SpectraRad is equipped with a fiber coupled right angle transmissive cosine corrector, which is irradiance calibrated against a NIST traceable Tungsten light source. BWSpec software is provided for characterization and measurement of many application lighting devices and systems. Standard software features include timeline recording, data smoothing, illuminance (lux), chromaticity, color temperature, and other data-handling functions.
Applications:
- Visible Spectroscopy / Spectroradiometry
- Illumination and Color Characterization
- Photobiology and Photochemistry
- Color Absorbance & Reflectance
- Lamp and LED Characterization
- UV Curing System QC
- Photostability Testing
- WL Identification
- Color Analysis
Specifications
Optical |
Spectral Range |
380nm – 750nm, 350nm – 1050nm |
Spectral Resolution |
~1.5nm, ~2.0nm |
Irradiance Range |
25 nW/cm2/nm – 4 mW/cm2/nm |
Electrical |
Detector Type |
Response Enhanced 2048 Element Linear Silicon CCD Array |
TE Cooling |
14°C |
External Trigger |
Aux Port |
Computer Interface |
BWSpec TM , BWIDTM, and BWIQTM (Requires External PC) |
Computer Interface |
USB 2.0 / 1.1 |
Data Transfer Speed |
Up to 180 spectra per second via USB 2.0 |
DC Power Input |
5V DC < 1.5 Amps |
Software |
Effective Integration Time |
5 – 120,000ms |
Operating Systems |
Windows: XP, Vista, 7 |
Environmental |
Operating Temperature |
15°C – 35°C |
Operational Relative Humidity |
85% Noncondensing |
Advantages of Spectral vs. Filter Based Instruments
Although filter based instruments are desired for certain properties such as cost, speed and portability, they are not always the best choice for analytical measurements. Filter based instruments only acquire three data points across the entire spectrum of light to yield colorimetric values. This is accomplished by the use of filters corresponding to the normal human eye response. These filters can only be manufactured to a certain degree of accuracy. Due to these facts, filter based meters are susceptible to errors because of the deviation of the filter response from the ideal human eye response and the lack of resolution needed to accurately describe narrow bandwidth light sources.
The SpectraRad Xpress avoids these problems at a comparable cost, higher speed, and small footprint because it acquires hundreds of data points across the visible spectrum. In addition, the 2048 pixel linear CCD array provides the precision required to accurately measure narrow bandwidth light sources or LEDs. Having multiple sensors also enables the unit to report spectral data and display spectral graphs, making it the ideal instrument for evaluating LEDs, which are today’s dominant light source.
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