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Color
and Fluorescent Brightness

Penetrant Color and Fluorescence
The color of the penetrant material is of obvious importance
in a visible dye penetrant inspection, as the dye must provide good
contrast against the developer or part being inspected. Remember
from the earlier discussion of contrast sensitivity that generally
the higher the contrast, the easier objects are to see. The dye
used in visible dye penetrant is usually vibrant red but other
colors can be purchased for special applications.
When fluorescent materials are involved, the effect of color
and fluorescence is not so straightforward. LPI materials fluoresce
because they contain one or more dyes that absorb electromagnetic
radiation over a particular wavelength and the absorption of photons
leads to changes in the electronic configuration of the molecules.
Since the molecules are not stable at this higher energy state,
they almost immediately re-emit the energy. There is some energy
loss in the process and this causes photons to be re-emitted at a
slightly longer wavelength that is in the visible range. The
radiation absorption and emission could take place a number of
times until the desired color and brightness is achieved. Two
different fluorescent colors can be mixed to interact by a mechanism
called cascading. The emission of visible light by this process
involves one dye absorbing ultraviolet radiation to emit a band
of radiation that makes a second dye glow. Since the human eye
is the most commonly used sensing device, most penetrants are
designed to fluoresce as close as possible to the eyes' peak response.
For more information
on how the human eye responds to colored light, follow this link.
Penetrant Brightness
Fluorescent brightness was erroneously once thought to be the
controlling factor with respect to flaw detection sensitivity.
Measurements have been made to evaluate the intrinsic brightness
of virtually all commercially available penetrants and they all
have about the same brightness. Intrinsic brightness values are
determined for thick liquid films but the dimensional threshold
of fluorescence (discussed on the next page) is a more important
property. The measurement of fluorescent brightness is detailed
in ASTM E-1135, "Standard Test Method for Comparing the Brightness
of Fluorescent Penetrants."
Click here to learn why things
fluoresce.
References:
Gram, B., Mechanisms Contributing to Fluorescence and Visibility
of Penetrants, Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference
on Nondestructive Testing, May 1967, pp 225-233.
Alburger, J.R., Dimensional Transition Effects in Visible Color
and Fluorescent Dye Liquids, Proceedings, 23rd Annual Conference,
Instrument Society of America, Vol. 23, Part I, Paper No. 564.
Alburger, J.R., Signal-to-Noise Ratio in the Inspection Penetrant
Process, Materials Evaluation, September 1974, pp. 193-200.
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