Comment by briandw
3 hours ago
I looked it up and Far-UVC (typically 222 nm) seems safe-ish. But how do you confirm it's not outputting 254 nm or other wavelengths in the UVA/B range? Seems likely to happen with sloppy production of sources. You really have to trust the filter on the light or verify the frequency somehow.
(author)
The non-profit OSLUV evaluates lamps and measures their emissions. Here's their evaluation for the Aerolamp, which is the one I've purchased: https://reports.osluv.org/static/assay/aerolamp%20devkit--27...
OSLUV is fantastic; doing great work.
Well, just use your USB spectrometer, of course.
...you do have a USB spectrometer, don't you?
I have mine in my bedside drawer. I use it almost as often as my multimeter.
Does yours measure wavelengths that short? A lot of low cost spectrometers don't, because inexpensive glass and plastic optics transmit visible and near-IR radiation but significantly impair shorter UV wavelengths.
I need to get one :)