This is old common knowledge, why this is a paper? Everyone knows that exposing the clothes to the sun cleans many types of stains.

It's news to me that the sun is blue!

Jokes aside, I suppose it's novel in the sense that it can be achieved with artificial _blue_ light.

My understanding was that it was various forms of UV from the sun that caused "bleaching", whereas the paper points out that it is not UV in this case, and in fact, the UV can cause additional staining.

EDIT: Edited for grammar.

Tue sun is probably the most powerful blue light you can readily access. There's just a bunch of other colours that come with it.

Maybe I should have emphasised the word "artificial" rather than the word "blue", the implication was that it's not the only type of blue light, the sun being the obvious one.

The thing about the sun is, you get no light when there's no sun, and some countries don't even get daylight for several months of the year!

I haven't read the paper only looked at the first page with the two sheets, but I think the novel idea here is that it's using complementary colors.

Take a color that is maximally absorbed by the stain and thus get the most energy into it without affecting too much else.

I wonder if that would work with other colors as well.

It's an interesting idea, and how it would work with colours other than "bleached" would be the interesting part.

Presumably it wouldn't work on black without fading the garment, but given how we've seen things fade in shop windows, I wonder if there's some novel applications for removing other types of intentional "stains" like ink, or paint, and particularly if they're under/behind a surface like a clear-coat or glass or something else that prevents physical access.

I wonder if you could remove blue ink with yellow light. Specifically residue from ballpoint pens on furniture.

That would be an interesting one, I have a strangely related story that not too long ago my toddler drew _all over_ a yellow suede sofa with a blue ballpoint pen, was a nightmare to get it out without making the pristine sofa look like a drowned rat.

I am a common "poo-pooer" of bad submissions on here, and comments not in good faith

But this paper taught me something I had no idea about as a 33 year old. Also in the comment chain someone mentioned/brought up using peroxide/sunlight to clear up old yellowed plastics which is....monumental to some of my projects :)

Be warned though that retr0brighting is an art. If done unevenly it looks worse than before.

rushes outside to undo the hasty application/test I did on my old miata soft top plastic

ty, too much coffee this morning

Ultraviolet light is ionizing. Things oxidize and often whiten in sun because the UV light (the part of the UV spectrum as you go below ~315nm) ionizes and causes chemical reactions, in most cases by splitting O2 which is then charged O atoms that want to react with things.

445nm light isn't ionizing at any brightness, and shouldn't be catalyzing oxidation. Didn't look at it in detail but what is their claim on mechanism?