Laser Diffraction (LD)

Particle size distributions from nanometers to millimeters.

Laser diffraction is a widely used particle sizing technique for materials ranging from hundreds of nanometers up to several millimeters in size. The main reasons for its success are:

  • Wide dynamic range - from submicron to the millimeter size range.
  • Rapid measurements - results generated in less than a minute.
  • Repeatability - large numbers of particles are sampled in each measurement.
  • Instant feedback - monitor and control the particle dispersion process.
  • High sample throughput - hundreds of measurements per day.
  • Calibration is not necessary - easily verified using standard reference materials.
  • Well established technique - covered by ISO13320 (2020).

For these reasons, laser diffraction is becoming the standard particle sizing technique across many industry sectors, being faster, simpler and having better resolution than more traditional sizing techniques such as sieve analysis.

Principles of laser diffraction

Laser diffraction measures particle size distributions by measuring the angular variation in intensity of light scattered as a laser beam passes through a dispersed particulate sample. 

Large particles scatter light at small angles relative to the laser beam and small particles scatter light at large angles. The angular scattering intensity data is then analyzed to calculate the size of the particles responsible for creating the scattering pattern, using the Mie theory of light scattering. 

The particle size is reported as a volume equivalent sphere diameter.

Optical properties

Laser diffraction uses Mie theory of light scattering to calculate the particle size distribution, assuming a volume equivalent sphere model.

Mie theory requires knowledge of the optical properties (refractive index and imaginary component) of both the sample being measured, along with the refractive index of the dispersant. Usually the optical properties of the dispersant are relatively easy to find from published data, and many modern instruments will have in-built databases that include common dispersants. For samples where the optical properties are not known, the user can either measure them or estimate them using an iterative approach based upon the goodness of fit between the modeled data and the actual data collected for the sample.

A simplified approach is to use the Fraunhofer approximation, which does not require knowledge of the optical properties of the sample. This can provide accurate results for large particles. However it should be used with caution whenever working with samples which might have particles below 50µm or where the particles are relatively transparent.

Mastersizer range

Mastersizer range

The smartest way to measure particle size

Spraytec

Spraytec

Spray particle and spray droplet size measurement

Insitec range

Insitec range

Robust, reliable, real-time particle sizing

Technology
Laser Diffraction
Dispersion type
Dry
Spray
Wet
Particle size range 0.01µm - 3500µm 0.1µm - 2000µm 0.1µm - 2500µm