Development of a one-micrometer-diameter particle size Standard Reference Material

The average diameter of the first micrometer particle size standard (Standard Reference Material 1690), an aqueous suspension of monosized polystyrene spheres with a nominal 1 μm diameter, was accurately determined by three independent techniques. In one technique the intensity of light scattered by...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of research of the National Bureau of Standards (1977) 1985-01, Vol.90 (1), p.3-26
Hauptverfasser: Mulholland, G.W., Hartman, A.W., Hembree, G.G., Marx, E., Lettieri, T.R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The average diameter of the first micrometer particle size standard (Standard Reference Material 1690), an aqueous suspension of monosized polystyrene spheres with a nominal 1 μm diameter, was accurately determined by three independent techniques. In one technique the intensity of light scattered by a diluted suspension of polystyrene spheres was measured as a function of scattering angle, using a He-Ne laser polarized in the vertical direction. The second technique consisted of measuring as a function of angle the intensity of light scattered from individual polystyrene spheres suspended in air, using a He-Cd laser with light polarized parallel and perpendicular to the scattering plane. The measurement of row length by optical microscopy for polystyrene spheres arranged in close-packed, two-dimensional hexagonal arrays was the basis of the third technique. The measurement errors for each technique were quantitatively assessed. For the light scattering experiments, this required simulation with numerical experiments. The average diameter determined by each technique agreed within 0.5% with the most accurate value being 0.895±0.007 μm based on light scattering by an aqueous suspension. Transmission electron microscopy, flow through electrical sensing zone counter measurements, and optical microscopy were also used to obtain more detailed information on the size distribution including the standard deviation (0.0095 μm), fraction of off-size particles, and the fraction of agglomerated doublets (1.5%).
ISSN:0160-1741
2376-5259
DOI:10.6028/jres.090.001