Why orange color is visible with blue LED?

  • Thread starter Thread starter kevin_tee
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Color Led
AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the observation of orange light emitted from a methyl orange solution illuminated by a blue LED, despite the LED's narrow blue spectrum. Participants explore whether the orange light is due to reflection or fluorescence, with a consensus leaning towards fluorescence as methyl orange absorbs blue light and emits across a broader spectrum, including orange. The conversation also touches on the absorption characteristics of methyl orange, suggesting that the blue light is absorbed quickly, resulting in the orange emission visible at the surface of the solution. Some users propose experiments using diffraction grating to observe both the blue and orange spectra. The overall conclusion highlights the complex interactions of light absorption and emission in colored solutions.
kevin_tee
Messages
80
Reaction score
2
I am making a DIY spectophotometer.

What you see in this photo is flask of methyl orange solution in water with blue led in the back in a black box. As you can see the surrounding is blue because the box reflect blue light, however the light coming through the flask is orange. I don't understand why, blue LED gives narrow spectrum of blue light (450-500 nm from wikipedia). So there should be no orange color (600 nm or mix of green 500-570 nm and red 610-760 nm). Thank you.
 

Attachments

  • DSC_3912.png
    DSC_3912.png
    71.7 KB · Views: 727
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes Dr. Courtney
Physics news on Phys.org
kevin_tee said:
What you see in this photo is flask of methyl orange solution in water with blue led in the back in a black box. As you can see the surrounding is blue because the box reflect blue light, however the light coming through the flask is orange. I don't understand why, blue LED gives narrow spectrum of blue light (450-500 nm from wikipedia). So there should be no orange color (600 nm or mix of green 500-570 nm and red 610-760 nm). Thank you.

Do you know whether the orange is a reflection or fluorescence?
 
Dr. Courtney said:
Do you know whether the orange is a reflection or fluorescence?
Ohhh. I never knew that methyl orange have fluorescence. From the photo, I think it is reflection, because there is a dark area in the solution, if it is fluorescence that dark part must be lit up a bit.
 
The flask is filled to the 50ml level with water plus a few drops of methyl orange?
 
NascentOxygen said:
The flask is filled to the 50ml level with water plus a few drops of methyl orange?
100 ml of deionized water and 0.01 gram of methyl orange powder and then half it.
 
I understand that LED is monochromatic light, but the photo shows that there are orange light. Or I misunderstood something?
 
kevin_tee said:
I understand that LED is monochromatic light, but the photo shows that there are orange light. Or I misunderstood something?
I think the methyl orange, has a large portion of it's absorption spectrum in the blue range,
That energy, once absorbed, has to go somewhere.
It is just a guess, but one of the spontaneous decay products, could be your orange photons.
 
kevin_tee said:
I am making a DIY spectophotometer.

What you see in this photo is flask of methyl orange solution in water with blue led in the back in a black box. As you can see the surrounding is blue because the box reflect blue light, however the light coming through the flask is orange. I don't understand why, blue LED gives narrow spectrum of blue light (450-500 nm from wikipedia). So there should be no orange color (600 nm or mix of green 500-570 nm and red 610-760 nm). Thank you.

Methyl orange is fluorescent- it absorbs blue light from the LAD and emits over a fairly broad waveband, including orange (540 nm):

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/269036448_Absorption_and_Fluorescence_Spectra_of_Methyl_Orange_in_Aqueous_Solutions
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • Like
Likes davenn
The orange light seems to emenate from the first few mm of solution at the base---that first encountered by the laser light. So the blue is rapidly absorbed and doesn't penetrate far at all? The orange pattern in the centre of the image is a complex reflection of that orange glow at the base? At the concentration of dye involved here, in white light would the solution have a pale appearance resembling light beer?
 
  • #10
The 5 orange circular thingy is LED and the rest is cause by refraction and reflection.

So if I use diffraction grating film, I will see two spectrum (orange and blue) right?
 
Last edited:
  • #11
It would be interesting to see the blue LED behind a wedge of the dyed liquid, e.g., by tilting a half-filled flask. Where the wedge of liquid is thick, we'd see this orange light, where the wedge is zero thickness the transmitted light will be blue, and maybe there'd be a level where the light coming through would be a mixture, viz., green? Kevin_tee, do you have the apparatus that you can try this?
 
  • #12
kevin_tee said:
The 5 orange circular thingy is LED and the rest is cause by refraction and reflection.

So if I use diffraction grating film, I will see two spectrum (orange and blue) right?

I suspect that if you observe the totally-internally reflected 'images' of the LED, you will see two spectra- one from the unabsorbed blue light and one from the fluorescently emitted orange light.
 

Similar threads

Replies
5
Views
1K
Replies
8
Views
3K
Replies
6
Views
19K
Replies
21
Views
3K
Replies
207
Views
12K
Back
Top