Yes it can, so far I've tried with TCS3472 color sensor which reads RGB.Curious why you're worried about total color change amount? Can't the photo sensor pick up any change?
my experience with this sensor is, it does not produce the same result everytime, infact if I read the value twice with a gap of 1s I get slightly different number (yes the device is complete isolating the cuvette to avoid environmental light to interfere) could be my programming error or most likely the LED flicker is causing this because I tried with PWM dimming to read the results with different brightness of light, I will have to test with full brightness too and with different methods.
if the color has a significant change then it should be fairly easy to distinguish, if there is a minor difference between two colors of major difference in values, a slight error in sensor readings would be mistaken for wrong results. I need to produce repeatable results with the same sample.
However I am yet to test it with a photodiode to see the results. And because we are getting multiple colors instead of linear increment in a single color we may need to use color sensor that reads RGB so we can tell the color difference too, it looks like the calibration curve is going to be pretty complex.
Will require testing with multiple wavelengths of LEDs also to see which one works best with which color.
But yes you are right the device should be able to accurately read the color values even if they are not clearly different to a human eye. Even if I am able to produce significant color difference with this reagent, this is not going to be the case with all the reagents.
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