Title: PowerPoint-Pr
1Field-Portable Spectroscopy
Introduction
- Field-portable spectroscopy has traditionally
been used in remote sensing applications. - The technology can be used for on site analysis
of soils and agricultural inputs and products. - Field-portable spectroscopy utilizes diffuse
reflectance of light in the visible (350-750 nm)
and near infrared (750-2,500 nm) wavelength
regions of the electromagnetic spectrum (Fig. 1).
- The measured spectrum (Fig. 2) contains
interpretable information about the composition,
structure, and concentration of substances in a
sample.
Figure 1 The electromagnetic spectrum
Figure 2. Visible near infrared spectrum of a
soil sample.
Instrumentation
Key Advantages/Limitations
- Portable
- Useful for field applications
- Little sample preparation
- Rapid acquisition of unprocessed samples
- Low cost instrument
- Visible wavelength range gives information on
iron oxides in soil
- Field-portable instruments can run on battery
power. - Reflected light is gathered through a fibre-optic
cable. An integrating sphere with an external
light source can be used.
- External white reference is required
- No internal reference or validation available
- Instrument needs annual service at factory
- Reproducibility across instruments and over time
is unknown - Readings are sensitive to movement of the
fibre-optic cable
Field-portable spectrometer fitted with an
integrating sphere containing an integrated light
source. In this example a soil sample contained
in a Petri dish is being scanned.
Contact World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF), P.O.
Box 30677-00100 Nairobi, Kenya. Tel 254 020 722
4000. www.worldagroforestry.org