New spectrometer could fit in your smartphone

The fiber-coupled microspectrometer array maps 39 spectra onto a CMOS sensor. Credit: Fraunhofer IOF.

At the Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Optics and Precision Engineering IOF, a team of smart scientists has created something pretty cool and incredibly small: a spectrometer module that can fit into your mobile phone or other portable devices.

This tiny gadget, set to be showcased at the analytica trade fair in Munich, can analyze light from many sources all at once, making it a game-changer for fields like quality assurance, analytics, and even farming.

What’s a spectrometer, anyway?

In simple terms, a spectrometer is a device that looks at light from different sources and breaks it down into its colors (spectrum).

By analyzing these colors, scientists can figure out a lot about the source of the light, like its composition or quality.

Normally, you’d need a bunch of separate spectrometers to analyze multiple light sources or some pretty hefty lab equipment that’s not exactly portable.

The Fraunhofer IOF team’s invention changes the game. Their spectrometer is not only tiny but also capable of analyzing light from 39 different sources simultaneously!

Imagine 39 tiny light channels all leading to a single, compact system that records all their spectral data. It does this through a special setup that involves a series of micro-optical elements—tiny components that work together to direct and analyze the light.

This setup includes something called a prism-grating-prism arrangement, tucked between miniature lenses.

These elements work together to ensure that light from each of the 39 channels is analyzed separately, without any mix-up, and then projected onto a camera sensor. The whole optical system is so compact it’s less than two centimeters long, yet it can map out a spectrum of colors from light wavelengths between 400 to 800 nanometers, achieving an impressive resolution.

This microspectrometer can make a big difference in several fields. In quality assurance, for example, it can check the coating on products or the quality of printing by analyzing the light reflected off them. In bioanalytics, it can carry out multiple tests at once. And in agriculture, it can help monitor the health of plants by looking at the light they reflect, all without the need for bulky equipment.

The technology is robust and versatile, designed to be easily integrated into different setups. Over three years, with the support of the Thüringer Aufbaubank, the team has brought this tech from an idea to a practical, usable form.

Now, they’re looking to fine-tune it for specific uses, whether that’s adjusting the resolution, expanding the range of light wavelengths it can analyze, or modifying it in other ways to meet the needs of various applications.

What’s exciting about this development is not just the technology itself but what it represents for the future of analytics, quality assurance, and even sustainable farming.

By making spectrometers smaller, more versatile, and mobile, the team at Fraunhofer IOF is opening up a world of possibilities for on-the-go analysis and quality checks.

This could lead to more efficient manufacturing processes, better quality products, and even healthier crops, all thanks to a tiny device that can see the world in a spectrum of colors.