##Purpose## Chemists use [expensive tools called spectrometers](/notes/warren/11-30-2011/visible-light-spectrometer-2660-4-7nm-bandwidth) (there are several kinds) to analyze unknown solid or liquid samples. We are working on a cheap version which we hope to use **to identify oil contamination in water and soil**, as well as a range of other possible toxins. Spectrometers can also be used to identify species of plants or crop diseases, assess plumes from smokestacks, and have many other applications. ###What's spectrometry?### What we perceive as a single color consists of multiple blended colors- just as green paint can be made from mixing yellow and blue paint. A spectrometer is a device that splits light into the various colors it is composed of, which we otherwise cannot distinguish with the naked eye. By viewing a substance through a spectrometer, one can distinguish the exact mixture of colors, which correspond to specific wavelengths of light, that make up the perceived color of the sample. Spectrometry diagram spectrum ###Make your own inexpensive spectrometer### The PLOTS spectrometer is a Do-it-Yourself tool made from simple materials: * 4 1/8" x 8 3/8" stiff black card paper * a clean DVD-R * a webcam * velcro, dark tape, a box cutter/x-acto knife The DVD's tightly packed grooves act as a diffraction grating -- basically a prism. When light enters, the different wavelengths of light are bent to different degrees, forming a rainbow -- a spectrum. Learn how to make one here: [Video spectrometer construction](/wiki/video-spectrometer-construction) This design is released under the CERN Open Hardware License 1.1 (read agreement here). It features: * around 400-900 nanometer range, maybe wider * 5-10 nm spectral resolution * 20-30 samples per second * ~ $10 in materials * < 1 hour construction time * Mac and Linux compatible, should work on Windows but untested * [open-source software](/wiki/spectral-workbench) A completed spectrometer ###Usage### One group of toxins common to fossil fuel contamination are PAHs, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, which are generally carcinogenic. ... ###Online spectral analysis### Along with the physical tool itself, the PLOTS team has also developed an online application which allows anyone to upload a spectrum photographed with a digital camera to the website, and use the online tool to analyze the intensity of the spectrum. The intensity of the spectrum at each wavelength adds a second dimension to the data, allowing for more accurate comparisons to known spectrums. Another tutorial: ###Resources, Downloads, FAQ### Access the online tool at: https://spectralworkbench.org * [Tube spectrometer](/wiki/tube-spectrometer) Several guides have been made showing you how to make a spectrometer. Make a Spectrometer - Alex McCarthy And another prepared by the PLOTS team for our workshop at the Whitney Museum, here: plots-spectrometer-guide-small.pdf Finally, a FAQ with some insights about actually *using* your spectrometer can be found here: [Spectrometer FAQ](http://www.publiclaboratory.org/wiki/spectrometer-faq)