Hello, I'm sorry if I didn't word the title better.
Summary: I'm trying to detect sunlight while the LED luminaires are present and turned on.
I know it may sound kind of strange but this is the idea: say you have a lounge. The LED ceiling light is on, and at the same time, natural light is coming from outside through the window. And the natural sunlight is sufficient, thus the LED lighting clearly is a waste of energy and one more reason to increase carbon emission.
But often times people are too busy with themselves to care about this. You just finished an important meeting and are thinking about something really stressful, no one would notice the light is on, esp. when the room is already fully lit by natural sunlight.
Now imagine 100 office buildings with 1000 such lounges over a year, the waste could be significant.
So is it possible to detect certain section of the spectrum of natural sunlight, the section where it is strongly correlated with sunlight, but almost non-existent in the lights emitted by WHITE LEDs?
I know most people probably would immediately think of infrared, problem is, this may not be the easiest direction since there may be extra heat source in the room, for example, a boiling coffee pot or a freezer.
Also I wish the solution could be relatively affordable, so I'm guess I may have to stick with infrared/ultraviolet, however difficult. Because anything beyond is either exponentially more difficult to detect or simply too pricey.
Last but not least, you can not temporarily turn off the LEDs themselves, it'll take another thread to explain why that is not an option, so I'll just simply put it here: that is not a viable solution, due to some reasons.