Title: Particle Size Sizing Technique 1: Coulter principle
1Particle Size Sizing Technique 1 Coulter
principle
- Kausar Ahmad
- Kulliyyah of Pharmacy, IIUM
2Topics on Sizing Techniques
- Electrical sensing zone method
- Sieving method
- Microscopy
- Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM)
- Hydrodynamic Chromatography
- Laser diffraction technique
- Photon Correlation Spectroscopy
3Industries Involving Particles
- Electronics
- Mineral and metal industry
- Polymers, plastics and composite fillers
- Textile products
- Wood and paper products
- Cosmetics
- Pharmaceuticals
- Soaps, detergent and abrasives
- Processed food
- Cement and concrete, glass and ceramics,
chemicals, paints, coatings, inks, agricultural
4Particle-related Processes
- Grinding
- Ion exchange
- Precipitation
- Water clarification
- Road surfacing
- Chromatography
- Detergency
- Emulsion polymerisation
- Food processing
5Properties of Particles
- Size
- Shape
- Nature soft, hard
- Particle-particle interactions
- Particle-solvent interactions
- Surface properties
- Surface charge
- Specific surface area
- Pore size
6Techniques to Identify Particles
- Visual inspection
- Optical microscopy
- Polarised light microscopy
- Crystal morphology
- Scanning electron microscopy
- Surface morphology
- Transmission electron microscopy
- Infrared micro-spectrophotometry
- Structural information
- Mass spectrometry
- Mass-specific molecular data
- X-ray crystallography
- Crystal structure
- X-ray spectrometry
- Elemental composition
7Electrical Sensing Zone Method
- A.k.a. the Coulter principle
- Basic method of counting and sizing based on the
detection and measurement of - changes in electrical resistance,
- produced by a particle or biological cell,
- suspended in a conductive liquid,
- traversing through a small aperture.
8Wallace Coulter - Coulter orifice (1956)
- (as early as 1948) - measured changes in
electrical conductance as cells suspended in
saline passed through a small orifice - Cells are relatively poor conductors
- Blood is a suspension of cells in plasma which is
a relatively good conductor - Previously it was known that the cellular
fraction of blood could be estimated from the
conductance of blood - As the ratio of cells to plasma increases the
conductance of blood decreases
9Slide 8 of 83
Slide 8 of 83
10Continue Electrical Sensing Zone Method
- Current flow in a conducting liquid
- A current, which is maintained between two
electrodes, will create a sensing zone around the
aperture - When passing through the aperture, the magnitude
of the current is ca. I mA - When a particle passes through the aperture, it
causes changes in electrical impedance - Each particle will trigger a voltage pulse
indicating a depression in current flow - The magnitude of the decrease depends on size of
particle
11Interpreting the results
- Amplitude of the pulse is proportional to the
volume of the particle - Hence, can determine diameter of particle
- Each pulse represents one particle
- Hence, can determine the number of particle
- And therefore, Coulter counter.
- The voltage pulses will be counted, amplified and
allocated to the right size class.
12Advantages of Technique
- capable of counting thousands of particles per
second - Results are not affected by
- Colour
- Composition
- Refractive index
- Or other light interaction effects
- Absolute sample volume. Why is this an advantage?
13Converting Signals to Particle Diameter
- Calibrate instrument using 10 or 20 µm
polystyrene standards - Obtain the Kd ?slide
- The Kd is used to convert the amplitude of the
pulse in volt to volume of the particle (this is
a linear response) - From the volume, the diameter can be calculated.
14Calibration of instrument
- A monodisperse standard is used
- Concentration used is very low so that
coincidence effects are less than 2 - Pulses on oscilloscope of uniform size
- Instrument is adjusted so that height is 40 of
maximum by controlling gain and currect
selector settings - This gives the Kd. see next slide
15Diameter Calibration Factor, kD
- Kd 6WVm1012/?VT?(?nV)1/3
- W mass of sample in beaker (g)
- VT volume of electrolyte solution in which W is
diluted - Vm manometer volume (cm3)
- immersed density of the particles (g/cm3)
- ?n number of particles in a size interval
- V arithmetic mean volume for that particular
size interval, in instrument units (e.g. product
of threshold value, aperture current, and
attenuation)
16Relationship between electrical signal and
volume of particle
- Voltage proportional to volume of particle
- U constant x V
- constant r0if / ?2R4
- Uamplitude of voltage pulse
- Vparticle volume
- r0electrical resistivity
- i aperture current
- f particle shape factor
- Raperture radius
must not be dirty
17Sample Concentration
- If more than one particle passes through the
aperture at exactly the same time, the reading is
not accurate. - Therefore, sample must be reasonably diluted and
should be within the specified range as indicated
by the instrument. - Exercise For a given volume, the smaller the
particles, the lesser is the sample required. WHY?
18Sample Condition
- It is important that only one particle passes
through the aperture. - There should not be any aggregation or
flocculation. - For detecting a stable suspension, the particles
must exist as discrete individual entities. - A dispersant must be used
- Samples dispersed in the electrolyte must be
stirred during measurement, especially if it is a
solid dispersion, to prevent settling.
19Aperture
- The aperture comes in different sizes
- E.g. an aperture of 100 µm can detect particles
within 2 to 60 µm - Outside the range, the measurement is not
accurate - Aperture should be cleanwhy?
20Results Generated
- Results can be displayed in terms of number,
volume, surface area against particle size. - Size axis can be linear, logarithmic scale
- Distribution can be differential or cumulative
data - Cumulative data can be oversize or undersize
21Application
- Counting algae
- Counting bacteria
- Counting cells
- To standardise standards !
- In industries
- To detect contaminant in petroleum
- Electronic TV screen, CRT (Dots per inch DPI)
22References
- JZ Knapp, TA Barber A Lieberman, Liquid and
Surface-Borne Particle Measurement Handbook,
Marcel Dekker, New York (1996). - T Allen, Particle Size Measurement 4th. Ed.,
Chapman and Hall, London (1990). - http//www.cyto.purdue.edu/flowcyt/educate/ee520/s
ld008.htm - Beckman-Coulter Multisizer 3 operation manual
(lab)