have UV lights that I would like to put in a tube and block it's harmful UV rays. I plan to use a polycarbonate tube, but I'm getting conflicting answers on wikipedia if it 100% blocks harmful UV.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/polyca...
Above link it says polycarb resists UV fairly. (right and colum in yellow)
On the same page bellow the graph it says: 0% transmission at almost exactly 400 nm, blocking all UV light transmission."
Then here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/uv_lig...
It says under "Eye" paragraph. "Some plastic lens materials, such as polycarbonate, inherently block most UV."
What's the straight story on this?
2007-12-18
05:11:26
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9 answers
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asked by
honeyroastedeggroll
1
in
Science & Mathematics
➔ Physics
From what I gather. I think polycarbonate naturally blocks a majority of UV, but not 100%. That more treatment is needed to make it a 100% blocker.
2007-12-18
06:19:09 ·
update #1