Michal Zalewski Tracks Down Things That Glow in the Dark — with a Clever Phosphorescence Detector

When the glow of charged powered milk disappears in a few milliseconds, you're going to need something clever to capture it.

Michal Zalewski has been on a hunt for things that glow in the dark — aided by a homemade phosphorescence detector, built from a tin with a photodiode and a quartet of ultraviolet LEDs controlled by a Microchip AVR Dx microcontroller.

"Some time ago, my eldest son decided to make glow-in-the-dark pigments by doping strontium aluminate with rare earth elements," Zalewski explains of the project. "After a bit of trial and error, he succeeded — and the relative simplicity of the process made me wonder if there are any naturally-phosphorescent materials in our homes."

Four UV LEDs and a photodetector turn a simple tin into a phosphorescence detection chamber. (📷: Michal Zalewski)

The most obvious way to check is, of course, to turn the lights off and see if anything glows. As anyone who has been disappointed by commercially-available glow-in-the-dark decorations will know, though, that doesn't really work: phosphorescent materials need to be "charged" by exposure to strong light, ideally with an ultraviolet component, before they'll glow — and unless they're specifically built for the task, said glow is likely to be both hard to see and short-lived.

To solve that, Zalewski designed a phosphorescence detector: a light-proof metal tin with a single Martech MT03-023 photodiode and four 385nm LEDs. The photodiode is then connected to a Texas Instruments TLV3541 op-amp to provide a 220,000-times amplification — run through a low-pass filter and the amplified twentyfold once more before being connected to a Microchip MCP33151-10 analog to digital converter (ADC) and a AVR Dx microcontroller.

The idea behind the detector is simple: place the material under test into the chamber and seal the lid, then turn the UV LEDs on for a few seconds. Extinguish the LEDs, activate the photodiode and chart its response — seeing if there's any residual glow from the materials that would indicate phosphorescence.

The device can detect millisecond-duration phosphorescence from a range of materials, including powered milk (above). (📷: Michal Zalewski)

"I first tested the circuit with a plastic glow-in-the-dark trinket dyed with zinc sulfide," Zalewski writes. "Although the object glows in the dark for a good while, the intensity of the effect already decays exponentially on a sub-millisecond scale.

"One of the finds that exhibited pretty strong phosphorescence was powdered milk. Another unexpected glow-in-the-dark foodstuff? Gelatin! It initially registers about 30% higher than powdered milk, but decays more quickly."

Zalewski's full write-up, including schematics, is available on Substack.

ghalfacree

Freelance journalist, technical author, hacker, tinkerer, erstwhile sysadmin. For hire: freelance@halfacree.co.uk.

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