Optical Making a vein viewer with LED lights

AI Thread Summary
To optimize a vein viewer with LED lights, several factors affect light penetration through the skin, including the angle of the lights, skin color, and the presence of swollen areas. The choice of LED wavelength is crucial, with near-infrared LEDs being most effective as they allow veins to appear darker against surrounding tissue due to their higher absorbency. The arrangement of LEDs can be either circular or rectangular, but following the guide's original design is recommended, with caution against closing off the top of the rectangle. Additionally, using a parallel light beam may enhance visibility compared to a non-divergent beam. For practical testing, utilizing a cellphone camera can help visualize the illuminated area, as these cameras can detect infrared light better than the human eye.
Hieu
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I'm trying to optimize my vein viewer with LED lights but I'm not sure which factors affect the penetration of the light through the skin. (I'm following this guide https://www.instructables.com/id/How-to-make-an-affordable-Vein-Finder-for-use-d/)
I can say those factors are the angle of the lights, the colour of the skin, swollen areas. Is there anything else I should consider too? And should I use Parallel light beam instead of non-divergence light beam?
The last question I want to ask is about the arrangement of the LED lights. Is it best to arrange them as a circle or a rectangular?
FIUFV3LHELXKGZ5.LARGE.jpg

Sorry for my bad English if there is any mistake.
 

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Hieu said:
I'm trying to optimize my vein viewer with LED lights but I'm not sure which factors affect the penetration of the light through the skin. (I'm following this guide https://www.instructables.com/id/How-to-make-an-affordable-Vein-Finder-for-use-d/)
I can say those factors are the angle of the lights, the colour of the skin, swollen areas. Is there anything else I should consider too? And should I use Parallel light beam instead of non-divergence light beam?
From the link, it sounds like the choice of the LEDs is the most important thing:
This tool works by using near-infrared wavelength LEDs to illuminate the flesh at the site. The veins will appear as dark bands because they are more absorbent of this spectrum of light than the surrounding tissue.
Are you using the exact LEDs that he specifies?
Hieu said:
The last question I want to ask is about the arrangement of the LED lights. Is it best to arrange them as a circle or a rectangular?
In the theme of the project, probably you want to arrange them as he did in his project. However, I wouldn't close off the top of the rectangle with plastic like he did. QUIZ QUESTION -- Why? :biggrin:

BTW, don't expect too much out of this project. The vein viewers that are commercially available use IR light and translate that into visible light that you can see, like this product:

https://sgmh.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/accuvein-picture.png

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Now that it’s been a few days, how is your project going
 
Try looking at the illuminated area with your cellphone camera. They see farther into IR spectrum than our human eyes do.
 
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