UV LED Exposure Box Project
The purpose of this project is to build an ultraviolet exposure box
for exposing UV-sensitive films, such as those used for PCB
photoresists.
UV Box
Finished the UV exposure box. The working area is 9x12 inches with 99
LEDs in a triangular grid. The light pattern is not as consistent as
I was hoping, but I haven't tried aligning any of the LEDs yet.
Haven't tried exposing anything with it yet either. Note that neither
the top cover nor the pcb tray (bottom and front pieces) are shown;
the box is intended to be mostly light-resistant when closed so the
board can "simmer" therein after exposure.
Update: I aligned the LEDs somewhat, and have been using it. Works
great, with an exposure time around 5 minutes.
UV Power Supply
I asked on sci.electronics.design about the design of a power supply
that could feed 20 mA through 100 LEDs. The best suggestion was to
use LM317's in current limiting mode with 62 ohm resistors. The
supply in the photo is designed to work with a 25.2 VAC transformer,
producing 38 VDC when unloaded. The photos show one bank of nine LEDS
and ten other "dummy" loads (470 ohm resistors) to simulate 11 banks
of 9 leds, or 99 leds. Results:
- Power supply drops to 35.5 VDC with 0.22 amps load
- Vf across the LED string is 29.4 V, or 3.27 V per LED.
- That leaves 1.25 V across the 62 ohm resistors and 4.85 V across
the LM317's.
The board itself is really a board - it's 1/4 inch maple plywood with
a piece of 10 mil etched clad taped to it. Note the 10K resistor on
the back to bleed the charge out of the capacitor. Without it, as
soon as the cap's voltage dropped below the LED's Vf, it nearly
stopped discharging, leaving about 30v across it. The resistor also
helps shut the LEDs off more forcefully