rc101268 said:
I have LEDs of 0.7mW, but for my experiments, I want my values to be in light intensity unit - W/cm2.
I cannot figure out how to do the conversion.
The best way to do this is to measure physical quantities in order to calculate the irradiance (IMO, a more appropriate and less confusing term than intensity*) in (watts/cm^2). Here's the procedure.
1. Get a photo diode with calibrated responsivity (R, in amps/watt) at the wavelength of the LED and known detector area, Ad.
2. Place the detector a known distance, z, away from the LED.
3. Measure the current, I, passing through the LED. You may have to turn the room lights out. Or measure the current with LED on and then again with the LED off then take the difference.
4. The LED irradiance at the detector, and in that direction, is
E = I/(R*Ad)
5. A more useful property of the LED is its radiance, an optical invariant. If you know the emitting area, As, of the LED, Then its radiance is
L = I*z^2/(R*Ad*As*cos(theta)).
where theta the angle of the line of sight from the normal of the LED to the normal of the detector.
All this assumes that the size of the LED and detector are small compared to the distance, z.
* Intensity is a confusing term because different authors have different meanings for the term. Some authors use it to mean irradiance (power received/receiving area, in watts/cm^2) but some authors use it to mean "intensity" (power emitted/solid angle, in watts/steradian).