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content/posts/led-characterization.rst
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---
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title: "Led Characterization"
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date: 2018-05-02T11:18:38+02:00
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draft: true
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---
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Preface
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-------
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Recently, I have been working on a `small driver`_ for ambient lighting using 12V LED strips like you can get
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inexpensively from China. I wanted to be able to just throw one of these somewhere, stick down some LED tape, hook it up
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to a small transformer and be able to control it through Wifi. When I was writing the firmware, I noticed that when
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fading between different colors, the colors look *all wrong*! This observation led me down a rabbit hole of color
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perception and LED peculiarities.
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The idea of the LED driver was that it can be used either with up to eight single-color LED tapes or, much more
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interesting, with up to two RGB or RGBW (red-green-blue-white) LED tapes. For ambient lighting high color resolution was
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really important so you could dim it down a lot without flickering. I ended up using the same driver stage I used in the
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`multichannel LED driver`_ project for its great color resolution and low hardware requirements.
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.. figure:: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d6/RGB_color_cube.svg
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:width: 100%
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:alt: An illustration of the RGB color cube
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An illustration of the RGB color cube. `Picture by Maklaan
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<https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:RGB_color_cube.svg>`_ (`CC BY-SA 3.0`_), from Wikimedia Commons.
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To make setting colors over Wifi more intuitive I implemented support for HSV colors. RGB is fine for communication
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between computers, but I think HSV is easier to work with when manually inputting colors from the command line. RGB is
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close to how most monitors, cameras and the human visual apparatus work on a very low level but doesn't match
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higher-level human color perception very well. When we describe a color we tend to think in terms of "hue" or
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"brightness", and computing a measure of those from RGB values is not easy.
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Colors and Color Spaces
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-----------------------
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`Color spaces`_ are a mathematical abstraction of the concept of color. When we say "RGB", most of the time we actually
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mean `sRGB`_, a standardized notion of how to map three numbers labelled "red", "green" and "blue" onto a perceived
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color. `HSV`_ is an early attempt to more closely align these numbers with our perception. After HSV, a number of other
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*perceptual* color spaces such as `XYZ (CIE 1931)`_ and `CIE Lab/LCh`_ were born, further improving this alignment. In
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this mathematical model, mapping a color from one color space into another color space is just a coordinate
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transformation.
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.. figure:: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/4e/HSV_color_solid_cylinder.png
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:width: 50%
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:align: center
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:alt: An illustration of the HSV color space as a cylinder
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An illustration of the HSV color space as a cylinder. `Picture by SharkD
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<https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:HSV_color_solid_cylinder.png>`_ (`CC BY-SA 3.0`_), from Wikimedia Commons.
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The wrong colors I got when fading between colors were caused by this coordinate transformation being askew. Thinking
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over the problem, there are several sources for imperfections:
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* The LED driver may not be entirely linear. For most modulations such as PWM the brightness will be linear starting
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from a certain value, but there is probably an offset caused by imperfect edges of the LED current. This offset can be
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compensated with software calibration. I built a calibration setup for driver linearity in the `multichannel LED
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driver`_ project.
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.. FIXME picture with ringing on edges
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* The red, green and blue channels of the LEDs used on the LED tape are not matched. This skews the RGB color space.
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In practice, the blue channel of my RGB tape to me *looks* much brighter than the red channel.
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* The precise colors of the red, green and blue channels of the LEDs are unknown. Though the red channel *looks* red, it
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may be of a slightly different hue compared to the reference red used in `sRGB`_ which would also skew the RGB color
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space.
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These last two errors are tricky to compensate. What I needed for that was basically a model of the *perceived* colors
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of the LED tape's color channels. A way of doing his is to record the spectra of all color channels and then evaluate
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their respective XYZ coordinates. If all three channels are measured in one go with the same setup the relative
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magnitudes of the channels in XYZ will be accurate.
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To map any color to the LEDs, the color's XYZ coordinates simply have to be mapped onto the linear coordinate system
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produced by these three points within XYZ. LEDs are extremely linear in their luminous flux vs. current characteristic
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so this model will be adequate. The spectral integrals mapping the channels' measured responses to XYZ need only be
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calculated once and their results can be used as scaling factors thereafter.
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.. FIXME: Add led/current graph here
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Measuring the spectrum
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----------------------
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In order to compensate for the cheap LED tape's non-ideal performance I had to measure the LED's red, green and blue
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channels' spectra. The obvious thing would be to go out and buy a `spectrograph`_, or ask someone to borrow theirs. The
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former is kind of expensive, and I did not want to wait two weeks for the thing to arrive. The latter I could probably
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not do every time I got new LED tape. Thus the only choice was to build my own.
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Luckily, building your own spectrometer is really easy. The first thing you need is something that splits incident light
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into its constituent wavelengths. In professional devices this is called the *`monochromator`_*, since it allows extraction
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of small color bands from the spectrum. The second thing is some sort of optics that project the incident light onto a
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screen behind the monochromator. In professional devices lenses or curved mirrors are used. In a simple homebrew job a
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pinhole as you would use in a `camera obscura`_ does a remarkably nice job.
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For the monochromator component several things could be used. A prism would work, but I did not have any. The
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alternative is a `diffraction grating`_. Professional gratings are quite specialized pieces of equipment and thus
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rather expensive. Luckily, there is a common household item that works almost as well: A regular CD or DVD. The
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microscopic grooves that are used to record data in a CD or DVD work the same as the grooves in a professional
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diffraction grating.
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Household spectra
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-----------------
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From this starting point, a few seconds on my favorite search engine yielded an `article by two researchers from the
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National Science Museum in Tokyo`_ providing a nice blueprint for a simple cardboard-and-DVD construction for use in
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classrooms. I replicated their device using a DVD and it worked beautifully. Daylight and several types of small LEDs I
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had around did show the expected spectra. Small red, yellow, green, and blue LEDs showed narrow spectra, daylight one
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continuous broad one, and white LEDs a continuous broad one with a distinct bright spot in the blue part. The
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single-color LED spectra are quite narrow since they are determined by the LED's semiconductor's band gap, which is
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specific to the semiconductor used and is quite precise. White LEDs are in fact a blue LED chip covered with a so-called
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*phosphor*. This phosphor is not elementary phosphorus but an anorganic compound that absorbs the LED chip's blue light
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and re-emits a broader spectrum of more yellow-ish wavelengths instead. The final LED spectrum is a superposition of
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both spectra, with some of the original blue light leaking through the phosphor mixing with the broadband yellow
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spectrum of the phosphor.
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.. FIXME: Cardboard spectrograph pictures
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Now that I had a spectrograph, I needed a somewhat predictable way of measuring the spectrum it gave me.
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Measuring a spectrum
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--------------------
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Pointing a camera at the spectrograph would be the obvious thing to do. This produces pretty images but has one critical
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flaw: I wanted to acquire quantitative measurements of brightness across the spectrum. Since I don't have a precise
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technical datasheet specifying the spectral response of any of my cameras I can't compare the absolute brightness of
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different colors on their pictures. Some other sensor was needed.
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.. FIXME: Spectrum picture
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Measuring light intensity
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Looking around my lab, I found a bag of `SFH2701`_ visible-light photodiodes. Their
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datasheet includes their spectral response so I can compensate for that, allowing precise-ish absolute intensity
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measurements. Just like LEDs, photodiodes are extremely linear across several orders of magnitude. The datasheet of the
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classic `BPW34`_ photodiode shows that this photodiode's light current is exactly proportional to illuminance over at
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least three orders of magnitude. The `SFH2701`_ datasheet does not include a similar graph but its performance will be
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similar. The `SFH2701`_ photodiodes I had at hand were perfect for the job compared to the vintage `BPW34`_ since their
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active sensing area is really small (0.6mm by 0.6mm) compared to the BPW34 (a whopping 3mm by 3mm). If I were to use a
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`BPW34`_ I would have to insert some small apterture in front of it so it does not catch too broad a part of the
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spectrum at once. The `SFH2701`_ is small enough that if I just point it at the projected spectrum directly I will
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already get only a small part of the spectrum inside its 0.6mm active area.
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To convert the photodiode's tiny photocurrent into a measurable voltage I built another copy of the `transimpedance
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amplifier`_ circuit I already used in the `multichannel LED driver`_. A `transimpedance amplifier`_ is an
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amplifiert that produces a large voltage from a small current. The weird name comes from the fact that it works kind of
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like an amplified resistor (which can be generalized as an *impedance* electrically). Apply a current to a resistor and
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you get a voltage. A transimpedance amplifiert does the same with the difference that its input always stays at 0V,
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making it look like an ideal current sink to the connected current source.
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Transimpedance amplifiers are common in optoelectronics to convert small photocurrents to voltages. In this instance I
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built a very simple circuit with a dampened transimpedance amplifier stage followed by a simple RC filter for noise
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rejection and a regular non-inverting amplifier using another op-amp from the same chip to further boost the filtered
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transimpedance amplifier output. I put all the passives setting amplifier response (the gain-setting resistors and the
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filter resistor and capacitors) on a small removable adapter so I could easily change them if necessary. I put a small
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trimpot on the virtual ground both amplifers use as a reference so I could trim that if necessary.
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.. FIXME: Add transimp amp schematic and build pics
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Given a way to measure intensity what remains missing is a way to scan a single photodiode across the spectrum.
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Scanning the projection
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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A cheap linear stage can be found in any old CD or DVD drive. These drives use a small linear stage based on a
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stepper-driven screw to move the laser unit radially. Removing the laser unit and connecting a leftover stepper driver
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module I was left with a small linear stage with about 45 steps per cm without microstepping enabled. The driver I used
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was an `A4988`_ module that required at least 8V motor drive voltage. I used a small micro USB-input boost converter
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module to generate a stable 10V supply for the motor driver, with the USB's 5V rail used as a logic supply for the motor
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driver.
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.. FIXME: Add picture of photodiode stage here
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The `SFH2701`_ can easily be mounted to the linear stage using a small SMD breakout board glued in place with thin wires
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connecting it to the transimpedance amplifier. The DVD drive linear stage is not very strong so it is important that
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this wire does not put too much strain on it.
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Above the photodiode, I mounted a small piece of paper on the linear stage to be used as a projection screen to align
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the linear stage in front of the spectrometer viewing window. A line on the screen paper points to the photodiode die in
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parallel to the linear stage allowing precise alignment.
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The whole unit with photodiode preamplifier, linear stage, photodiode and stepper motor driver finally looks like this:
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.. FIXME: pics of linear stage unit electronics
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The projection of the spectrum can be adjusted by moving the light source relative to the entry slot and by moving
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around the grating DVD.
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The capture process
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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To capture a spectrum, first the light source has to be mounted near the spectrograph's entry slot. The LED tape I
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tested I just taped face-down directly into it. Next, the grating DVD has to be adjusted to make sure the spectrum
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covers a sensible part of the photodiode's path. Mostly, this boils down to adjusting the photodiode distance and height
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to match the vertical extent and wiggling the grating DVD to adjust the projection's horizontal position.
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After the optics are set-up, the photodiode preamplifier has to be adjusted. In my experiments, most LED tape at 5GΩ
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required a high-ish amplification. The goal in this step is to maximize the peak response of the preamp to be just
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shy of its VCC rail to make best use of its dynamic range. To adjust the pre-amp, I took several very coarsely-spaced
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measurements to give me an estimate of the peak while I did not yet know its precise location.
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Since stray daylight totally swamped out the weak projection of the LED's spectrum I shielded the entire setup with a
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small box made of black cardboard and two black t-shirts on top. This shielding proved adequate for all my measurements
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but I had to be careful not to accidentially move the DVD that was stuck into the spectrograph with the shielding
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t-shirts.
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For capturing a single spectrum I wrote a small python script that will automatically move the stepper in adjustable
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intervals and take two measurements at each point, one with the LED tape off that can be used for offset calibration and
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one with the LED tape on. All measurements are stored in a sqlite database that can then be accesssed from other
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scripts.
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I built a small script that shows the progress of the current run and an jupyter notebook for data analysis. The jupyter
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notebook is capable of live-updating a graph with the in-progress spectrum's data. This was quite useful as a sanity
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check for when I made some mistake easy to spot in the resulting data.
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After one color channel is captured, the LED tape has to be manually set to the next color and the next measurement can
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begin.
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Data analysis
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Data analysis consists of three major steps: Offset- and stray light removal, wavelength and amplitude calibration and
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color space mapping.
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Offset removal
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**************
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The first task is to remove the offset caused by dark current as well as stray light of the LED's bright primary
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reflection on the DVD. The LED is very bright and only a small part of its light gets reflected by the grating towards
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the photodiode screen. The remaining part of the light is reflected onto the table in front of the DVD spectrograph.
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Though I covered all of this with black cardboard, some of that light ultimately gets reflected onto the photodiode.
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This causes a large offset, in particular in the blue part of the spectrum since in this part the photodiode is closest
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to the spectrograph's opening.
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The composite offset can be approximated with a second-order polynomial that is fitted to all the data outside of the
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main peak's area. Since at this point the wavelength of each data point is still unknown this is done with a rough first
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estimate of the three colors' peaks' locations and widths.
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Wavelength- and amplitude calibration
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*************************************
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The photodiode's response is strongly wavelength-dependent. In particular in the blue band, the photodiode's sensitivity
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gets very poor down to about 20% at the edge to ultraviolet. This effect is strong enough to move the apparent location
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of the blue peak towards red.
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The problem is that in order to remove this non-linearity, we would already have to know the wavelength of the measured
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light. Since I don't, I settled for a two-step process. First, a coarse wavelength calibration is done relative to the
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red peak and the short-wavelength edge of the blue peak. The photodiode measurements are then sensitivity-corrected
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using this coarse measurement. Then all three channel peaks are measured in the resulting data and a fine wavelength
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estimate is produced by a least-squares fit of a linear function. This fine estimate is then used for a second
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sensitivity correction of all original measurements and the scale is changed from stepper motor step count to
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wavelength in nanometers.
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.. FIXME: calibration for brightness imbalance due to wedge-shaped projection of spectrum
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Color space mapping
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*******************
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Finally, to achieve the objective of measuring the LED tape's channels' precise color coordinates the measured spetra
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have to be matched against the color spaces' *color matching functions*. The color matching functions describe how
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strong the color space's idealized *standard observer* would react to light at a particular wavelength. Going from a
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measured spectrum to color coordinates XYZ works by integrating over the product of the measurement and each color
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coordinate's color matching function.
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The result are three color coordinates X, Y and Z for each channel R, G and B yielding nine coordinates in total. When
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written as a matrix conversion between XYZ color space and LED-RGB color space is as simple as multiplying that matrix
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(or its inverse) and a vector from one of the color spaces.
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If you view the three channels' color coordinates as vectors in XYZ space, the set of colors that can be produced with
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this LED tape is described by the `parallelepiped`_ spanned by the three channel vectors.
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The last task is to decide on a scaling factor to map XYZ space to RGB space. Both are limited to values between 0.0 and
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1.0. The LEDs cannot go below off or above fully on. For any LED tape there will be a set of colors that are outside
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the range that this tape can produce.
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A scaling factor can be used to increase the number of XYZ coordinates that can be mapped to RGB colors the tape *can*
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produce by stretching the RGB parallelepiped along its major axis. Up to a point the number of possible colors (the
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gamut) increases at expense of maximum brightness. When the parallelepiped is stretched far enought for all three
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channel vectors to be outside the 1,1,1 XYZ-cube, maximum brightness continues to decrease but the gamut stays constant.
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Firmware implementation
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-----------------------
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In the end, the above measurements yield two matrices: One for mapping XYZ to RGB, and one for mapping RGB to XYZ. I
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chose the CIE 1931 XYZ color space as a basis for the firmware because it is most popular. Mapping a color coordinate in
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one color space to the other is as simple as performing nine floating-point multiplications and six additions. Mapping
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Lab or Lch to RGB is done by first mapping Lab/Lch to XYZ, then XYZ to RGB. Lab to XYZ is somewhat complex since it
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requires a floating-point power for gamma correction, but any self-respecting libc will have one of those so this is
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still no problem. Lch also requires floating-point sine and cosine functions, but these should still be no problem on
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most hardware.
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My implementation of these conversions in the ESP8266 firmware of my `Wifi LED driver`_ can be found `on Github`_.
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.. _`on Github`: https://github.com/jaseg/esp_led_drv/blob/master/user/led_controller.c
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.. _`Wifi LED driver`: {{<ref "posts/wifi-led-driver.rst">}}
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.. _`small driver`: {{<ref "posts/wifi-led-driver.rst">}}
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.. _`multichannel LED driver`: {{<ref "posts/multichannel-led-driver.rst">}}
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.. _`sRGB`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SRGB
|
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.. _`CC BY-SA 3.0`: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0
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.. _`Color spaces`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_space
|
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.. _`HSV`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HSL_and_HSV
|
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.. _`CIE Lab/LCh`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lab_color_space
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.. _`XYZ (CIE 1931)`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CIE_1931_color_space
|
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.. _`camera obscura`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinhole_camera
|
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.. _`article by two researchers from the National Science Museum in Tokyo`: http://www.candac.ca/candacweb/sites/default/files/BuildaSpectroscope.pdf
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.. _`spectrograph`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultraviolet%E2%80%93visible_spectroscopy
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.. _`monochromator`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monochromator
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.. _`diffraction grating`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diffraction_grating
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.. _`SFH2701`: https://dammedia.osram.info/media/resource/hires/osram-dam-2495903/SFH%202701.pdf
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.. _`BPW34`: http://www.vishay.com/docs/81521/bpw34.pdf
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.. _`transimpedance amplifier`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transimpedance_amplifier
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.. _`A4988`: https://www.pololu.com/file/0J450/A4988.pdf
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.. _`parallelepiped`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallelepiped
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6
content/posts/multichannel-led-driver.rst
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6
content/posts/multichannel-led-driver.rst
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|
@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
|
|||
---
|
||||
title: "Multichannel Led Driver"
|
||||
date: 2018-05-02T11:31:14+02:00
|
||||
draft: true
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
6
content/posts/wifi-led-driver.rst
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6
content/posts/wifi-led-driver.rst
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@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
|
|||
---
|
||||
title: "Wifi Led Driver"
|
||||
date: 2018-05-02T11:31:03+02:00
|
||||
draft: true
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
43
content/posts/zeus-hammer.rst
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43
content/posts/zeus-hammer.rst
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|
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|
|||
---
|
||||
title: "Zeus Hammer"
|
||||
date: 2018-05-03T11:59:37+02:00
|
||||
draft: true
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
In case you were having an inferiority complex because your friends' IBM Model M keyboards are so much louder than the
|
||||
shitty rubber dome freebie you got with your pc... Here's the solution: Zeus Hammer, a simple typing cadence enhancer
|
||||
for `PS/2`_ keyboards.
|
||||
|
||||
.. FIXME: add demo video
|
||||
|
||||
The connects to the keyboard's PS/2 clock line and briefly actuates a large solenoid on each key press. An interesting
|
||||
fact about PS/2 is that the clock line is only active as long as either the host computer or the input device actually
|
||||
want to send data. In case of a keyboard that's the case when a key is pressed or when the host changes the keyboard's
|
||||
LED state, otherwise the clock line is silent. We ignore the LED activity for now as it's generally coupled to key
|
||||
presses. By just triggering an NE555 configured as astable flipflop we can stretch each train of clock pulses to a
|
||||
pulse a few tens of milliseconds long that is enough to actuate the solenoid.
|
||||
|
||||
.. image:: /images/zeus_hammer_schematic.jpg
|
||||
|
||||
Since PS/2 sends each key press and key release separately this circuit will pulse twice per keystroke. It would be
|
||||
possible to ignore one of them but I figure the added noise just adds to the experience.
|
||||
|
||||
Built on a breadboard, the circuit looks like this.
|
||||
|
||||
.. image:: /images/zeus_hammer_breadboard.jpg
|
||||
|
||||
The completed system looks like this.
|
||||
|
||||
.. FIXME: add image of completed system
|
||||
|
||||
Since my solenoid did not have a tensioning spring I used a rubber band and some vinyl tape to make an adjustable
|
||||
tensioner. The small orange USB hub serves as an end-stop because I had nothing else of the right shape. The sound and
|
||||
resonance of the thing can be adjusted to taste by moving the end stop, adjusting the tensioning rubber and tuning the
|
||||
excitation duration using the potentiometer. My particular solenoid was a bit slow so I added some pieces of circuit
|
||||
board as shims between the plunger and the case to limit the plunger's travel inside the solenoid core. Here is another
|
||||
video of the thing in action in which I tune and de-tune the mechanical resonance using the potentiometer.
|
||||
|
||||
.. FIXME: add video w/ tune/detune
|
||||
|
||||
.. _`PS/2`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PS/2_port
|
||||
|
||||
Loading…
Add table
Add a link
Reference in a new issue