The wavelength influences which material properties become visible and how strongly structures, colours or defects stand out. Different spectra produce different image effects – important for stable, reproducible inspection.
White light (VIS, 400–700 nm)
Suitable for applications where multiple colours or different materials are assessed simultaneously.
Contrast behaviour:
• natural representation of coloured surfaces
• good overall differentiation with mixed materials
• suitable for colour camera sensors
When is it useful?
When colour information is required or the scene needs to be assessed without strong spectral emphasis.
Monochromatic colours (red, blue, green)
Narrow-band light specifically enhances certain contrasts, as only one spectral range is used.Contrast behaviour:
• can improve contrast and apparent sharpness by reducing chromatic aberration effects
• emphasize wavelength-dependent reflectance
• clear colour contrasts (e.g. blue brings out yellow tones particularly well)
When is this useful?
When markings, edges, printed images or laser engravings need to be emphasised
UV (365–400 nm)
UV light activates fluorescence and makes fine details visible that are barely discernible in the visible spectrum.
Effects:
• Revealing adhesive residues, coatings, micro-cracks
• Highlighting of fluorescent materials
• High level of detail in fine structures
When is this useful?
When surfaces are required to react or fluoresce, or when very fine defects need to be detected.
IR / NIR (700–1000 nm)
Infrared reduces visible colours and minimises the influence of colour information.
Contrast behaviour:
• reflection behaviour can differ from the visible range, but still depends strongly on material, surface roughness, angle of incidence and polarisation
• Penetration of certain materials (e.g. labels, thin films)
• Stable in changing ambient light
When is it useful?
When colour or print information is undesirable or reflections interfere with evaluation.
SWIR (1000–1700 nm)
Reveals material properties that remain hidden in visible light.
Effects:
• Detection of moisture, fill levels, differences in density and layers
• Analysis of internal structures
• Can be combined with suitable sensors and filters to reduce the influence of visible ambient light
When is it useful?
For demanding inspections in food, pharmaceutical, electronics or packaging applications.
Tip:
The most reliable way to determine the correct wavelength is to ask three questions:
• Which feature needs to be visible? (Colour, structure, coating, defects)
• Do reflections play a role? ((IR may reduce the influence of visible colour, while UV can reveal fluorescent responses)
• What type of camera is being used? (Monochrome cameras are often preferred for maximum sensitivity and contrast, including with narrow-band light, while colour cameras are used when true colour information matters)