The new FS5 V2 spectrofluorometer is available as a benchop system for fluorescence spectroscopy.
Edinburgh Instruments, a spectroscopy instrument manufacturer based in Scotland, launched a new banking system for fluorescence spectroscopy. The FS5 V2 spectrofluorometer is suitable for perovskite solar cells, organic PV and quantum dot characterization.
The standard configuration includes a Foton -Bounting Photomultiplicateur (PMT) detector for fluorescence spectra of visible range and an absorption detector in one instrument, which eliminates the need for multiple instruments, according to the manufacturer.
The light source is a 150 W xenon arc lamp. Fully automated filter wheels are recorded as standard, as well as the fluoracle software for system control and automation of experiments, data acquisition and analysis tasks.
FS5 V2 is made for industrial and research laboratories and can be used to characterize perovskite solar cells, organic PV and quantum spots. “Edinburgh instruments has a series of customers in this space, active in areas that include Turkey, China, Australia and Korea,” said a spokesperson for the Edinburgh instrument PV Magazine.
The equipment can also be used for other types of liquid solutions, as well as solids and powders.
The FS5 V2 signal-noise ratio is 12,000: 1, making the detection of “even the weakest signals” possible. The standard spectral excitation range is <230 nm tot 1000 nm, terwijl het spectrale dekkingsemissiebereik 200 nm tot> 870 Nm is.
The wavelength -nouble is ± 0.5 Nm. The spectral coverage extends from the visible to the near-infrared (NIR) to 2.05 μm.
The compact unit measures 104 cm x 59 cm x 32 cm with a weight of 65 kg.
Steady-state fluorescence, time-limited measurements, quantum yield and phosphorescence are just a few of the types of measurements that the system can be configured to support, according to the manufacturer.
The equipment is available through the distributors of Edinburgh instruments in North and South America, in the west of, Central, Central and Eastern Europe, Africa, Asia and Australia.
Founded in 1971, Edinburgh Instruments designs and produces spectroscopic systems for various spectroscopy markets, including photoluminescence, Raman, UV-fish and transient absorption.
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