CHM4400 Advanced Analytical Chemistry: Particle Size Analysis
CHM4400 Advanced Analytical Chemistry: Particle Size Analysis
The ideal instrument for particle size analysis would provide a complete
distribution of the characteristic dimension of the particle.
Particle size analysis usually involves: (1) electrical properties; (2) transport
properties; (3) optical properties.
The instruments using these properties for particle size analysis generate
complex data at a high rate, and proper data analysis is critical in most
occasions.
MLK
N
The voltage pulses are counted and scaled using a multichannel analyzer in
Coulter counter
Coulter Counter Measurement Result
SEC HDC
As particle size increases from smaller than 1/20 times to larger than l,
scattering from different portions of a single particles is out of phase, causing
interference and reduced intensity.
For large particles, rays emitted in a backward direction observed at point D
can destructively interfere because of the path difference between SXD and
SYD.
Light Scattering
(d<0.05l)
(0.05l<d<l)
(d>l)
scattering angle
incident light
forward scattering
90o scattering
The water droplets that make up the cloud are much larger than the
molecules of the air. The Mie scattering is responsible for the white
appearance of clouds.
Fraunhofer Diffraction
For particles having a diameter much larger than l, there is little effect of
refractive index. A special case of Mie scattering theory, Fraunhofer
diffraction, is invoked.
Airy function
x
Particle Size Analysis
laser
PMT
Dynamic Light Scattering
If all the particles are stationary, the scattered light intensity at each direction would be
a constant (independent of time). However in reality all the particles are undergoing
constant Brownian motions, causing fluctuations of the scattered intensity.
Dynamic light scattering measures the intensity fluctuations. When incident light is
scattered by a moving macromolecule or particle, the detected frequency of the
scattered light will be slightly higher or lower than that of the original incident light
owing to Doppler Effect, depending on whether the particle moves towards or away
from the detector. Thus, the frequency distribution of the scattered light is slightly
broader than that of the incident light.
This frequency broadening is so small (~10 5-107 Hz) in comparison to the light
frequency (~1015 Hz) that it is very difficult to detect in the frequency domain, but it can
be recorded in the time domain via a time autocorrelation function. At time t’, the
scattered light intensity is s(t’) and at a very small time later (t’+t), the diffusing
particles will have new positions and the intensity at the PMT will have a value s(t’+t)
which correlates with s(t’), the closer the measurement is to time zero, the more
similar s(t’+t) is to s(t’) since the particles have not had much time to move. As time
goes on there is no more similarity between the starting state and the current state;
the measured intensities do no correlate anymore to the beginning one.
Dynamic Light Scattering
Autocorrelation function:
t = DTq2
dh = kBT/3phDT