DPA
What Is Dynamic Particle Analysis?
DPA analyzes particles by capturing high-speed images as they flow through a measurement zone. Advanced image processing software identifies individual particles and calculates parameters based on real particle geometry rather than indirect assumptions.
Because particles are measured individually, DPA provides more detailed information than techniques based solely on equivalent spherical diameter.
What DPA Measures
Dynamic Particle Analysis provides multiple particle parameters, including:
Particle size distribution (based on real projected area or equivalent diameters)
Particle shape parameters, such as:
aspect ratio
circularity
elongation
convexity
Particle count and population statistics
Morphological differences between samples
This makes DPA especially useful when particle shape influences flow, packing, reactivity, or product performance.
Why Use DPA?
DPA is chosen when traditional particle sizing methods are insufficient. It helps answer questions such as:
Are particles spherical, elongated, or irregular?
Is agglomeration present?
Do different batches have the same shape distribution?
How does processing affect particle morphology?
Are broken or oversized particles present?
Because shape matters as much as size in many applications, DPA provides insight that single-value sizing methods cannot.
Typical Application Scenarios
Powders & Granular Materials
Size and shape characterization for powders
Detection of fines, agglomerates, or oversized particles
Process monitoring for milling, grinding, or granulation
Pharmaceuticals & Chemicals
Particle morphology control for dissolution and flow
Batch consistency and supplier qualification
Comparison of crystallization or drying processes
Food & Consumer Products
Ingredient particle shape and size consistency
Detection of foreign or abnormal particles
Quality control of powders and granules
Materials R&D
Correlation of particle shape with performance
Evaluation of new processing routes
Optimization of particle engineering strategies
Failure & Troubleshooting
Investigation of flow issues, segregation, or poor compaction
Comparison of “good vs. problematic” materials
Identification of abnormal particle populations
Sample Types
DPA can be applied to:
dry powders
granules and pellets
suspensions and dispersions (case-dependent)
crystalline and amorphous particles
Xinbodi evaluates sample properties such as concentration, transparency, and particle size range to select optimal measurement conditions.
What You Will Receive
Each DPA project is delivered with a clear, structured report designed for engineering and QC decisions. A typical deliverable includes:
measurement objective and sample description
test conditions and analysis parameters
particle size distribution results
particle shape distributions and statistics
representative particle images
comparison summaries (batch vs. batch, supplier vs. supplier)
interpretation linked to processing and performance
recommendations for optimization or complementary testing
Why Choose Xinbodi for DPA?
Image-based analysis reflecting true particle geometry
Ability to evaluate both size and shape simultaneously
Experience across powders, chemicals, and advanced materials
Clear interpretation beyond raw distributions
Support for R&D, QC, and troubleshooting
Confidential handling of proprietary materials and data
FAQs
How is DPA different from laser diffraction?
Laser diffraction reports an equivalent spherical size and does not directly measure particle shape. DPA provides actual particle images and shape information.
Is DPA suitable for very fine particles?
DPA is best suited for particles within an instrument-dependent size range. Xinbodi can evaluate whether DPA or an alternative method is more appropriate.
Can DPA detect agglomeration?
Yes. DPA can identify agglomerates and distinguish them from primary particles based on shape and size features.
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