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Zetasizer DLS

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Size theory

CHAPTER 14

Introduction
The aim of this chapter is to describe the basic Size principles behind the Zetasizer Nano series. This will help in understanding the meaning of the results achieved. The chapter is divided into two major sections. What is Dynamic light scattering? and Operation of the Zetasizer Nano - Size measurements. The first section describes the theory, while the second describes the physical operation of how a size measurement is performed.

What is Dynamic Light Scattering?


The Zetasizer Nano series performs size measurements using a process called Dynamic Light Scattering (DLS) Dynamic Light Scattering (also known as PCS - Photon Correlation Spectroscopy) measures Brownian motion and relates this to the size of the particles. It does this by illuminating the particles with a laser and analysing the intensity fluctuations in the scattered light.

Scattering intensity fluctuations


If a small particle is illuminated by a light source such as a laser, the particle will scatter the light in all directions. If a screen is held close to the particle, the screen will be illuminated by the scattered light. Now consider replacing the single particle with thousands of stationary particles. The screen would now show a speckle pattern as shown below.

The speckle pattern will consist of areas of bright light and dark areas where no light is detected.
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What causes these bright and dark areas? The diagram below shows the propagated waves from the light scattered by the particles. The bright areas of light are where the light scattered by the particles arrive at the screen with the same phase and interferes constructively to form a bright patch. The dark areas are where the phase additions are mutually destructive and cancel each other out.
From Laser

Most light passes through unscattered

Detector

Average intensity
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The scattered light falling on the detector.

In the above example we said that the particles are not moving. In this situation the speckle pattern will also be stationary - in terms of both speckle position and speckle size. In practice, particles suspended in a liquid are never stationary. The particles are constantly moving due to Brownian motion. Brownian motion is the movement of particles due to the random collision with the molecules of the liquid that surrounds the particle. An important feature of Brownian motion for DLS is that small particles move quickly and large particles move more slowly. The relationship between the size of a particle and its speed due to Brownian motion is defined in the Stokes-Einstein equation. As the particles are constantly in motion the speckle pattern will also appear to move. As the particles move around, the constructive and destructive phase addition of the scattered light will cause the bright and dark areas to grow and diminish in intensity - or to put it another way, the intensity appears to fluctuate. The Zetasizer Nano system measures the rate of the intensity fluctuation and then uses this to calculate the size of the particles.

Interpreting scattering intensity fluctuation data


We know that the Zetasizer measures the fluctuation in scattering intensity and uses this to calculate the size of particles within the sample - but how does it do this?

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CHAPTER 14 Within the instrument is a component called a digital correlator. A correlator basically measures the degree of similarity between two signals over a period of time. If we compared the intensity signal of a particular part of the speckle pattern at one point in time (say time = t) to the intensity signal a very short time later (t+dt) we would see that the two signals are very similar - or strongly correlated. If we then compared the original signal a little further ahead in time (t+2dt), there would still be a relatively good comparison between the two signals, but it will not be as good as at t+ dt. The correlation is therefore reducing with time. Now consider the intensity of the signal at t, with the intensity at a much later time - the two signals will have no relation to each other as the particles are moving in random directions (due to Brownian motion). In this situation it is said that there is no correlation between the two signals. With DLS we are dealing with very small time scales. In a typical speckle pattern the length of time it takes for the correlation to reduce to zero is in the order of 1 to 10's of milliseconds. The "short time later" (dt) will be in the order of nanoseconds or microseconds! If we compare the signal intensity at (t) with itself then we would have perfect correlation as the signals are identical. Perfect correlation is reported as 1 and no correlation is reported as 0. If we continue to measure the correlation at (t+3dt), (t+4dt), (t+5dt), (t+6dt), etc, the correlation will eventually reach zero. A typical correlation function of correlation against time is shown below.
1.00

Correlation
0 t=0

Time

t=

Using the correlation function to get size information


How does the correlation function relate to the particle size? We mentioned earlier that the speed of particles that are being moved by Brownian motion is

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related to size of the particles (Stokes-Einstein equation). Large particles move slowly, while smaller particles move quickly. What effect will this have on the speckle pattern? If large particles are being measured, then, as they are moving slowly, the intensity of the speckle pattern will also fluctuate slowly. And simarlarly if small particles are being measured then, as they are moving quickly, the intensity of the speckle pattern will also fluctuate quickly. The graph below shows the correlation function for large and small particles. As can be seen, the rate of decay for the correlation function is related to particle size as the rate of decay is much faster for small particles than it is for large.
1.00
Perfect Correlation

Correlation

Large particles Small particles

0 t=0

Time

t=

After the correlation function has been measured this information can then be used to calculate the size distribution. The Zetasizer software uses algorithms to extract the decay rates for a number of size classes to produce a size distribution. A typical size distribution graph is shown below. The X axis shows a distribution of size classes, while the Y axis shows the relative intensity of the scattered light. This is therefore known as an intensity distribution.
Size distribution by Intensity
1.00

0.75

Amplitude

0.50

0.25

0.0 0.1 1 10 100 1000 1.0E+004


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Diameter (nm)

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CHAPTER 14 Although the fundamental size distribution generated by DLS is an intensity distribution, this can be converted, using Mie theory, to a volume distribution. This volume distribution can also be further converted to a number distribution. However, number distributions are of limited use as small errors in gathering data for the correlation function will lead to huge errors in distribution by number.

Intensity, volume and number distributions


What is the difference between intensity, volume and number distributions? A very simple way of describing the difference between the intensity, volume and number distributions is to consider a sample that contains only two sizes of particles (5nm and 50nm) but with equal numbers of each size particle. The first graph below shows the result as a number distribution. As expected the two peaks are of the same size (1:1) as there are equal number of particles. The second graph shown the result of the volume distribution. The area of the peak for the 50nm particles is 1000 times larger the peak for the 5nm (1:1000 ratio). This is because the volume of a 50nm particle is 1000 times larger that the 5nm particle (volume of a sphere is equal to 4/3p(r)3). The third graph shows the result of an intensity distribution. The area of the peak for the 50nm particles is now 1,000,000 times larger the peak for the 5nm (1:1000000 ratio). This is because large particles scatter much more light than small particles (the intensity of scattering of a particle is proportional to the sixth power of its diameter - (from Rayleighs approximation).
Number
Relative % in class Relative % in class
1 1

Volume
1000

Intensity
Relative % in class
1,000,000

Diameter (nm)

Diameter (nm)

Diameter (nm)

It is worth repeating that the basic distribution obtained from a DLS measurement is intensity - all other distributions are generated from this.

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5 10

50 100

5 10

50 100

5 10

50 100

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Operation of the Zetasizer Nano - Size measurements.


A typical DLS system comprises of six main components. First of all a laser + is used to provide a light source to illuminate the sample particles within a cell ,. Most of the laser beam passes straight through the sample, but some is scattered by the particles within the sample. A detector - is used to measure the intensity of the scattered light. As a particle scatters light in all directions, it is (in theory), possible to place the detector in any position and it will still detect the scattering. With the Zetasizer Nano series, depending upon the particular model, the detector position will be at either 173 or 90.
Laser

Zetasizer Nano S Nano ZS Nano S90 Nano ZS90

Optical arrangement 173 173 90 90


A A B B

Attenuator
17
4 3

A
3

Detector

Detector
2

90 Cell

Digital Signal Processor

Correlator

The intensity of the scattered light must be within a specific range for the detector to successfully measure it. If too much light is detected then the detector will become overloaded. To overcome this an attenuator . is used to reduce the intensity of the laser and hence reduce the intensity of the scattering.

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CHAPTER 14 . For samples that do not scatter much light, such as very small particles or samples of low concentration, the amount of scattered light must be increased. In this situation, the attenuator will allow more laser light through to the sample. . For samples that scatter more light, such as large particles or samples of higher concentration, the amount of scattered light must be decreased. This is achieved by using the attenuator to reduce the amount of laser light that passes through to the sample. The appropriate attenuator position is automatically determined by the Zetasizer during the measurement sequence. The scattering intensity signal for the detector is passed to a digital signal processing board called a correlator /. The correlator compares the scattering intensity at successive time intervals to derive the rate at which the intensity is varying. This correlator information is then passed to a computer 0, where the specialist Zetasizer software will analyse the data and derive size information. As mentioned earlier, depending upon the Zetasizer Nano model the detection optics will either be arranged at positions of either 173 or 90.

173 detection optics - Backscatter detection


The Zetasizer Nano Z, S and ZS measure the scattering information close to 180. This is known as backscatter detection. The application of the Backscatter detection is by a patented technology called NIBS (Non-Invasive Back-Scatter).
Detector

173
Laser Sample
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Why measure backscatter? There are several advantages to doing this: . Because the backscatter is being measured, the incident beam does not have to travel through the entire sample. This reduces an effect known as multiple scattering, where the scattered light from one particle is itself scattered by other particles. As the light passes through a shorter path length of the sample, then higher concentrations of sample can be measured. . Contaminants such as dust particles within the dispersant are typically large compared to the sample size. Large particles mainly scatter in the forward

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direction. Therefore, by measuring the backscatter, the effect of dust is greatly reduced. . The effect of multiple scattering is at a minimum at 180 - again, this allows higher concentrations to be measured.

Moveable lens
Within the Zetasizer Nano system, a movable lens allows the focus position within the cell to be changed. This allows a much larger range of sample concentrations to be measured.
For small particles, or samples of low concentration, it will be beneficial to maximise the amount of scattering from the sample. As the laser passes through the wall of the cell and into the dispersant, the cell wall will cause flare. This flare may swamp the scattering signal. Moving the measurement point away from the cell wall, towards the centre of the cell will remove this effect.

Sample

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Sample

Large particles or samples of high concentration, scatter much more light. In this situation, measuring closer to the cell wall will reduce the effect of multiple scattering. In this instance the flare from the cell wall will have less impact. Any flare will be proportionally reduced compared to the scattering signal.

The measurement position is automatically determined by the Zetasizer software.

90 detection optics - Classical arrangement


The 90 models, Zetasizer Nano S90 and ZS90, have been included in the Zetasizer Nano instrument range to provide continuity with other systems that have 90 detection optics. These models do not utilise a movable measurement arrangement but use the classical fixed detection arrangement of 90 to the laser and the centre of the cell area. This arrangement reduces the detectable size range on these models. Please see the specification table in appendix B for the measurement ranges.

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