SO 13320, Particle Size Analysis - Laser Diffraction Methods - Part 1: General Principles
SO 13320, Particle Size Analysis - Laser Diffraction Methods - Part 1: General Principles
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Central values: mean, median, mode Distribution widths Technique dependence Laser diffraction Dynamic light scattering Image analysis
8 Particle size result interpretation: number vs. volume distributions Transforming results 10 Setting particle size specications
Distribution basis Distribution points Including a mean value X vs.Y axis Testing reproducibility Including the error Setting specications for various analysis techniques
The importance of optical model Building a state of the art laser diffraction analyzer
18 SZ-100 dynamic light scattering technique
26 Dynamic range of the HORIBA particle characterization systems 27 Selecting a particle size analyzer
When to choose laser diffraction When to choose dynamic light scattering When to choose image analysis
29 References
Why is
Particle size is critical within a vast number of industries. For example, it determines:
appearance and gloss of paint avor of cocoa powder reectivity of highway paint hydration rate & strength of cement properties of die lling powder absorption rates of pharmaceuticals appearances of cosmetics
DIAMETER
VERTICAL PROJECTION
A spherical particle can be described using a single numberthe diameter because every dimension is identical. As seen in Figure 1, non-spherical particles can be described using multiple length and width measures (horizontal and vertical projections are shown here). These descriptions provide greater accuracy, but also greater complexity. Thus, many techniques make the useful and convenient assumption that every particle is a sphere. The reported value is typically an equivalent spherical diameter. This is essentially taking the physical measured value (i.e. scattered light, settling rate) and determining the size of the sphere that could produce the data. Although this approach is simplistic and not perfectly accurate, the shapes of particles generated by most industrial processes are such that the spherical assumption does not cause serious problems. Problems can arise, however, if the individual particles have a very large aspect ratio, such as bers or needles. Shape factor causes disagreements when particles are measured with different particle size analyzers. Each measurement technique detects size through the use of its own physical principle. For example, a sieve will tend to emphasize the second smallest dimension because of the way particles must orient themselves to pass through the mesh opening. A sedimentometer measures the rate of fall of the particle through a viscous medium, with the other particles and/or the container walls tending to slow their movement. Flaky or plate-like particles will orient to maximize drag while sedimenting, shifting the reported particle size in the smaller direction. A light scattering device will average the various dimensions as the particles ow randomly through the light beam, producing a distribution of sizes from the smallest to the largest dimensions. The only techniques that can describe particle size using multiple values are microscopy or automated image analysis. An image analysis system could describe the non-spherical particle seen in Figure 1 using the longest and shortest diameters, perimeter, projected area, or again by equivalent spherical diameter. When reporting a particle size distribution the most common format used even for image analysis systems is equivalent spherical diameter on the x axis and percent on the y axis. It is only for elongated or brous particles that the x axis is typically displayed as length rather than equivalent spherical diameter.
HORIZONTAL PROJECTION
Many techniques make the general assumption that every particle is a sphere and report the value of some equivalent diameter. Microscopy or automated image analysis are the only techniques that can describe particle size using multiple values for particles with larger aspect ratios.
For symmetric distributions such as the one shown in Figure 2 all central values are equivalent: mean = median = mode. But what do these values represent?
MEAN
Mean is a calculated value similar to the concept of average. The various mean calculations are dened in several standard documents (ref.1,2). There are multiple denitions for mean because the mean value is associated with the basis of the distribution calculation (number, surface, volume). See (ref. 3) for an explanation of number, surface, and volume distributions. Laser diffraction results are reported on a volume basis, so the volume mean can be used to dene the central point although the median is more frequently used than the mean when using this technique. The equation for dening the volume mean is shown below. The best way to think about this calculation is to think of a histogram table showing the upper and lower limits of n size channels along with the percent within this channel. The Di value for each channel is the geometric mean, the square root of upper x lower diameters. For the numerator take the geometric Di to the fourth power x the percent in that channel, summed over all channels. For the denominator take the geometric Di to the third power x the percent in that channel, summed over all channels.
gure 2