DIY Arduino Spectrophotometer for Berry Anthocyanins
ISEF Category: Biochemistry
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Subcategory: Analytical Biochemistry · Difficulty: Intermediate · Setup: School Lab · Time: 1 to 2 Months
The Hook
A berry can look fresh long after its pigment starts dropping. Your eyes miss that shift, but a simple light sensor can catch it. If your DIY spectrophotometer tracks a commercial unit, you are building a real analytical tool. Then you can use it to ask how berry color changes as storage time passes.
What Is It?
A spectrophotometer is a light meter with a filter. You shine one color of light through a sample, then measure how much makes it through. More pigment usually means less light gets through, and the Beer-Lambert law says that drop in light can track concentration in a straight line over a useful range.
Your DIY version uses an Arduino, a photodiode, and three LEDs, so you can test more than one color band. First, you benchmark it against a commercial unit with food dyes, which gives you a known standard. Then you switch to berry extracts and follow anthocyanins, the red-purple pigments that change as fruit ages or oxidizes.
Why This Is a Good Topic
This project gives you a clean engineering build and a real chemistry question in one setup. You can test calibration, linearity, and repeatability with food dyes, then move to a real food matrix that changes over time. That makes the work feel like method development, not just a demo. You also get a clear link to food quality, pigment chemistry, and low-cost sensing.
Research Questions
- How does LED wavelength affect the linear range of the DIY spectrophotometer for food dyes?
- What is the effect of cuvette material on agreement between the DIY unit and a commercial spectrophotometer?
- Does the Arduino-photodiode device match the commercial unit's Beer-Lambert slope for red, blue, and yellow dyes?
- To what extent does berry storage time change anthocyanin readings from the DIY spectrophotometer?
- Which calibration model gives the smallest error when converting photodiode signal into concentration?
- How does ambient light shielding affect repeatability across back-to-back measurements?
Basic Materials
- Arduino Uno or Nano microcontroller.
- Three LEDs with distinct wavelengths, such as red, green, and blue.
- Photodiode sensor module.
- Resistors, jumper wires, and a solderless breadboard.
- Black cardboard, foam board, or 3D printed parts for a light-tight housing.
- Clear plastic cuvettes or matching sample tubes.
- Food dye sets and distilled water for standards.
- Fresh berries, storage containers, and labels for time points.
- Dropper pipettes, coffee filters, and a digital kitchen scale with 0.1 g accuracy.
Advanced Materials
- Bench spectrophotometer or UV-Vis spectrometer for reference readings.
- Quartz cuvettes.
- Analytical balance.
- Micropipettes with disposable tips.
- Centrifuge or vacuum filtration setup for berry extracts.
- pH meter and buffer solutions for matrix checks.
Software & Tools
- Arduino IDE: Uploads the sensor code and reads raw light measurements.
- Python: Fits calibration curves, checks linearity, and compares error metrics.
- Google Sheets: Organizes replicates, blanks, and quick charts.
- JASP: Runs t tests, ANOVA, and effect size checks without paid software.
Experiment Steps
- Define the target signal, then choose whether you will calibrate on food dyes first or berry extracts first.
- Design the optical chamber, then lock in the LED, photodiode, and sample position so each reading uses the same geometry.
- Build the calibration curve, then select standards that span the absorbance range you expect to measure.
- Add controls and blanks, then separate true absorbance from ambient light, drift, and container effects.
- Benchmark the DIY unit against the commercial spectrophotometer, then compare slope, intercept, and repeatability.
- Apply the validated method to stored berries, then test how anthocyanin readings change across storage time.
Common Pitfalls
- Letting the housing leak room light, which pushes the photodiode reading around between trials.
- Changing the sample container or path length, which breaks the calibration curve.
- Skipping blanks for each LED wavelength, which makes the baseline look like absorbance.
- Comparing berry extracts with different cloudiness, which mixes pigment signal with scattering from pulp and solids.
- Using only one dye or one berry type, which hides whether the method really works across different matrices.
What Makes This Competitive
A stronger version treats the DIY instrument like a measurement method, not a craft build. Compare absorbance slopes, intercepts, and error across several dye classes, then report repeatability and bias against the commercial unit. Add a messy real sample like berries at different storage stages, and you show transfer from clean standards to a harder matrix. That mix of method validation, comparison data, and real-world samples can make the project stand out.
Project Variations
- Test blackberries, blueberries, and strawberries to see whether matrix color changes the calibration curve.
- Swap the LED set for UV and visible wavelengths to compare which band tracks anthocyanins best.
- Measure the same berries at different pH conditions to see how pigment chemistry changes the absorbance signal.
Learn More
- PubMed: Search review articles on anthocyanins, food pigments, and spectrophotometry.
- NIH PubChem: Look up anthocyanin structures and related pigment chemistry.
- USDA FoodData Central: Find berry composition data and sample context for common fruits.
- MIT OpenCourseWare: Search introductory analytical chemistry lectures on Beer-Lambert law and calibration.
- Journal of Chemical Education: Look for free spectrophotometry papers and instrument build ideas.
- OpenStax Chemistry 2e: Review absorbance, light interaction, and calibration curves in a free textbook.
Biochemistry Category Guide
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