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Colorimetry

What Is Colorimetry?

Colorimetry measures color under controlled conditions and reports results as standardized values. Unlike visual inspection, which varies by lighting and observer, colorimetry provides repeatable, objective data that can be used for specifications, acceptance criteria, and process control.

Colorimetry is widely used for materials, coatings, plastics, textiles, packaging, consumer products, and pigments—any product where appearance matters.

What Colorimetry Measures

Typical outputs include:

  • CIELAB L*a*b*

    • L* = lightness (0 = black, 100 = white)

    • a* = green (−) to red (+)

    • b* = blue (−) to yellow (+)

  • ΔE (color difference)
    Quantifies how different two colors are (e.g., batch vs. standard).

  • Whiteness / Yellowness Index (when relevant)
    Useful for polymers, papers, coatings, and products sensitive to yellowing.

  • Spectral reflectance curve (spectrophotometer-based)
    Helpful for deeper understanding of pigment behavior and shade shifts.

Why Color Measurement Matters

Color issues can be caused by raw material differences, process drift, contamination, degradation, or environmental exposure. Colorimetry helps you:

  • control batch consistency and reduce rejects

  • ensure supplier-to-supplier or lot-to-lot uniformity

  • confirm color matching to a standard

  • quantify discoloration after UV, heat, humidity, or chemical exposure

  • detect early signs of oxidation, aging, or formulation changes

  • support customer requirements with objective acceptance criteria

Typical Application Scenarios

Quality Control & Batch Release

  • Verify batch color vs. approved standard

  • Monitor process stability and detect drift early

  • Define pass/fail criteria using ΔE limits

Supplier Qualification & Incoming Inspection

  • Compare incoming raw materials or pigments from different suppliers

  • Confirm consistency across lots and shipments

  • Reduce variation in final product appearance

Plastics, Polymers & Masterbatch

  • Evaluate shade variation and dispersion impact

  • Measure yellowing after thermal processing or aging

  • Compare resin grades or additive packages

Coatings, Paints & Inks

  • Color matching and formulation optimization

  • Detect discoloration, fading, or whitening

  • Compare coated parts across production lines

Failure Analysis & Discoloration Investigation

  • Quantify discoloration on “good vs. bad” parts

  • Evaluate exposure effects (UV, heat, humidity)

  • Support root-cause analysis with objective color data

Sample Types

Colorimetry can be performed on many sample forms, including:

  • molded plastic parts, films, and sheets

  • coatings on panels or finished products

  • powders, pellets, and granules (method-dependent)

  • textiles, paper, packaging materials

  • consumer product surfaces (case-dependent)

For best reliability, Xinbodi can advise on sample preparation, measurement geometry, and whether multiple measurement locations are needed.

What You Will Receive

Each colorimetry project includes a structured report designed for engineering and QC decisions. A typical deliverable includes:

  • measurement objective and sample description

  • instrument and measurement conditions (illumination/observer settings as applicable)

  • L*a*b* values for each sample and location

  • ΔE comparison vs. reference/standard (or between samples)

  • whiteness/yellowness indices when requested

  • summary tables and clear pass/fail interpretation (if criteria are provided)

  • recommendations for further testing when color change suggests degradation or contamination
    (e.g., compositional analysis, impurity screening, aging tests)

Why Choose Xinbodi for Colorimetry?

  • Repeatable, standardized measurement methods for reliable QC data

  • Support for “standard vs. batch” and “good vs. bad” comparisons

  • Practical interpretation aligned with real production and customer acceptance needs

  • Ability to connect color change with follow-up analytical workflows

  • Confidential handling of proprietary products and formulations

FAQs

ΔE is a numerical value representing how different two colors are. A larger ΔE generally indicates a more noticeable difference. Acceptable limits depend on your product and industry requirements.

Colorimetry quantifies the change, but it may not identify the root cause by itself. If needed, Xinbodi can recommend follow-up analysis (e.g., FTIR, GC-MS, XPS, impurity analysis) based on the scenario.

Yes. Colorimetry can be used to quantify fading or yellowing after controlled exposure conditions such as UV, heat, and humidity (depending on project setup).

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