Aquat, just remember that 'making corals pop' isn't the same thing as offering corals the light they need to stay healthy.
+1
You will find fluorescent pigments in corals that will use different parts of the spectrum from ~350nm right up to and just over 600nm.
If you have 'high reef' corals (like many favia, favites, etc) that use chlorophyll, you want to give them an extra spike upwards of 600.
Offering this spectrum you will do well (adjust for your particular corals needs).
Once you offer enough of this spectrum to fulfill photosynthetic needs, you can then add more blue lights to change the overall appearance (kelvin) of your tank to however blueish you want...
...Keeping in mind there is a point of light intensity that will overload the corals 'defense mechanisms' and start photo-inhibition, or worse killing zoanth. So it can be harmful to give them too much intensity (even blue) light as well...
Everyone's spectrum is different depending on what fixtures/tech they use... I superimposed all my lighting fixtures par graphs together to find out what it looked like the other day (10k T5s + BluePlus T5s + Blue LED fixtures [~450nm])... here is what mine looked like
And the par values needed in a favia (personal fav coral in my tank)...
I tried to create a similar pattern with my light
And once I felt good with the par actually offered, I added more and more Blue LED's/bulbs until I got the desired overall [kelvin] appearance of my tank (2/3rds ratio for me, as in 2/3rds 'blue light' + 1/3 'white light')