When Chemistry is Too Colourful: Gamut Clipping in 8-bit sRGB Risks Misinterpretation of Camera-Based Chemical Analysis †

Abstract

Digital cameras are increasingly utilised to capture visual changes in chemical processes. Monitoring colour with computer vision tools serves as a valuable proxy for monitoring bulk chemical changes. Most consumer-grade cameras digitise the colours captured using the 8-bit sRGB colour space. Despite its ubiquity, it restricts the range of colour information that can be stored. With regards to chemical analysis and process monitoring, the limitations of using the 8-bit sRGB gamut have not been addressed. When real-world vivid colours one attempts to record lie outside the bounds of 8-bit sRGB, the digitisation of those colours can result in distortion, clipping, or loss of chemically relevant colour data. Ultimately, these sRGB gamut limitations risk the chemist misinterpreting the data they collect from a camera. In this paper, we examined the visible spectrum of a series of common dyes, and determined their colours spectroscopically, without the limitation of 8-bit sRGB encoding. We investigated how 8-bit sRGB encoding affects the interpretation of time-series data from theoretical colour changes in five dyes. Highly saturated chemical samples exceeded the 8-bit sRGB colour gamut, causing colour distortions and structural breaks in reaction-monitoring time series data, risking misinterpretation as kinetic phenomena of genuine chemical origin. Our findings underscore the importance of paying close attention to colour representation in digital chemistry. We offer practical guidance for researchers using and interpreting colour data for use in computer vision method development.

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Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
05 Feb 2026
Accepted
26 Jun 2026
First published
29 Jun 2026
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Digital Discovery, 2026, Accepted Manuscript

When Chemistry is Too Colourful: Gamut Clipping in 8-bit sRGB Risks Misinterpretation of Camera-Based Chemical Analysis †

C. Fyfe, S. Yu and M. Reid, Digital Discovery, 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D6DD00065G

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