Optics of sunscreen lotions: Preliminary results on scattering and absorption coefficients
Gunnar A. Niklasson, Sara L. Niklasson, Celina Notfors, Junxin Wang,, Maria Stromme, Cecilia Arhammar

TL;DR
This study introduces a method to determine the optical absorption and scattering spectra of sunscreens, providing insights into their UV blocking mechanisms and potential for optimizing formulations.
Contribution
A novel spectrophotometric analysis method using two-flux theory to extract optical properties of sunscreens from transmittance and reflectance data.
Findings
Spectra reveal the relative contributions of absorption and scattering in UV protection.
Method successfully applied to experimental and commercial sunscreens in vitro.
Potential to improve sunscreen formulation and testing methods.
Abstract
Sunscreen lotions are used to protect the skin from damage due to solar ultraviolet (UV) radiation. The active UV blocking components can be organic molecules or inorganic particles, for example TiO2. While both in vivo and in vitro methods exist for assessing the protective capacity of sunscreens, their basic optical properties have received little attention. In this paper we take the first steps to address this issue by presenting a method to obtain spectra of absorption and scattering coefficients of a sunscreen by analysis of experimental transmittance and reflectance spectra. We model the optical properties of the sunscreen by two flux theory, develop approximate expressions for interface reflection coefficients and obtain the remaining optical parameters by fitting the two-flux theory to measurements. We analyze spectrophotometric reflectance and transmittance spectra of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSkin Protection and Aging · Thermoregulation and physiological responses
