Paper
6 August 2014 Laser diffraction of acicular particles: practical applications
David M. Scott, Tatsushi Matsuyama
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 9232, International Conference on Optical Particle Characterization (OPC 2014); 923210 (2014) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2067298
Event: International Conference on Optical Particle Characterization (OPC 2014), 2014, Tokyo, Japan
Abstract
Commercial laser diffraction instruments are widely used to measure particle size distribution (PSD), but the results are distorted for non-spherical (acicular) particles often encountered in practical applications. Consequently the distribution, which is reported in terms of equivalent spherical diameter, requires interpretation. For rod-like and plate-like particles, the PSD tends to be bi-modal, with the two modal sizes closely related to the median length and width, or width and thickness, of the particles. Furthermore, it is found that the bi-modal PSD for at least one instrument can typically be approximated by a bi-lognormal distribution. By fitting such a function to the reported distribution, one may extract quantitative information useful for process or product development. This approach is illustrated by examples of such measurement on industrial samples of polymer particles, crystals, bacteria, and clays.
© (2014) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
David M. Scott and Tatsushi Matsuyama "Laser diffraction of acicular particles: practical applications", Proc. SPIE 9232, International Conference on Optical Particle Characterization (OPC 2014), 923210 (6 August 2014); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2067298
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KEYWORDS
Particles

Diffraction

Mie scattering

Crystals

Far-field diffraction

Laser applications

Spherical lenses

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