Spectrometry Sampling
How do you test liquid or solid samples with your DIY Spectrometer?
Sample containers
A good sample container has flat sides, so you can shine lights (and lasers) through it without lots of reflections. It's also good to have the light travel through a consistent amount of the sample -- many cuvettes (traditional spectrometry sample containers) are 1cm x 1cm, so the light always goes through 1cm of the sample.
A square-sided bottle, left, and a cuvette, right (photo from Wikipedia.
Water samples
Water is usually very clear in small amounts -- even murky water in a small container will look pretty transparent. That makes it hard to measure with spectrometry unless you shine light through a lot of it. But some tests have been done -- see this example of a scan of water from the Charles River before and after 7 days of settling, by Jeff Hecht:
[](https://i.publiclab.org/system/images/photos/000/001/732/original/charles-river.png)
However, most research in Public Lab to date has focused on oil spectroscopy -- attempting to identify petroleum residue in sediments. Read on to learn more!
Oil samples
more soon...