Why must specific environments use anti-ultraviolet yellow light tubes?

Nov 06, 2025

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Ordinary lighting in food processing industries, printing workshops, and museum storage rooms can degrade materials and create chemical reactions. Anti-ultraviolet yellow light tubes filter out much of the ultraviolet spectrum and block certain wavelengths with amber coatings, reducing these dangers at the light source.


Light control for precise protection


The selective emission technology of this light tube is its core. The lamp wall's yellow coating absorbs light below 500 nanometers, including harmful ultraviolet and violet-blue light. The LED variant couples chip excitation with the filter to directly generate amber light without UV components for more exact spectrum control.

Anti UV Yellow Tube Light3


Nonreplaceability in industry


These light tubes protect oils and chemicals in food manufacturing. The printing workshop relies on them to keep photosensitive materials safe in the open. Museums preserve cultural relics from photochemical deterioration. They avoid unintentional reagent breakdown and ensure experimental precision in chemical labs.


Key decision-making factors


Check the product's UV filtration rate and spectral data before buying. Professionals must filter over 99% of UV radiation. Color temperature and illuminance should be balanced. Dim light impairs work accuracy. Modern anti-ultraviolet LED bulbs combine protective effectiveness and visual comfort, making them the favored choice for high-end industrial situations.

Anti UV Yellow Tube Light

For more details about our offerings, please contact us at bwzm18@ledbenweilighting.com.

FAQ

Q: What is an LED anti-ultraviolet yellow lamp tube?

A: This is a professional lighting product. Through special yellow encapsulation materials and ultraviolet filtering technology, it effectively blocks ultraviolet radiation and limits specific blue light bands. Its light emission spectrum mainly falls within the yellow range, fundamentally eliminating the hazards of ultraviolet rays and short-wave blue light.

Q: Which places does it mainly apply to?

A: The core applications include food processing areas (to prevent oil from deteriorating), printing workshops (to protect photosensitive materials), museum display cases (to prevent cultural relics from fading), chemical laboratories (to prevent reagents from decomposing), etc. In these special environments sensitive to light, ordinary lighting would accelerate material oxidation and chemical changes.

 

 

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