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Laser Diffraction

What Is Laser Diffraction?

Laser diffraction measures particle size by analyzing how particles scatter a laser beam. Larger particles scatter light at smaller angles, while smaller particles scatter light at larger angles. By applying optical models, the scattered light pattern is converted into a particle size distribution.

Because thousands of particles are measured simultaneously, laser diffraction provides reliable and representative PSD data in a short time.

What Laser Diffraction Measures

Laser diffraction provides:

  • Particle size distribution (PSD)

  • Volume-based particle size metrics (e.g., D10, D50, D90)

  • Mean and median particle size

  • Distribution width and uniformity

  • Changes in particle size due to processing or handling

These results are commonly used to define specifications and acceptance criteria.

Why Particle Size Matters

Particle size strongly influences:

  • flowability and handling

  • packing density and compaction behavior

  • dissolution and reaction rates

  • filtration and separation efficiency

  • coating uniformity and surface quality

  • mechanical and thermal performance

Laser diffraction helps you:

  • control particle size during production

  • compare materials from different suppliers

  • optimize milling, grinding, or granulation processes

  • identify agglomeration or oversize particles

  • correlate PSD with product performance

Typical Application Scenarios

Powders & Granular Materials

  • Particle size control for powders and granules

  • Detection of fines or oversized particles

  • Batch-to-batch consistency verification

Chemicals & Pharmaceuticals

  • PSD monitoring for formulation stability

  • Process optimization and validation

  • Supplier qualification and incoming inspection

Ceramics & Advanced Materials

  • Particle size control for sintering and densification

  • Comparison of raw materials and processing routes

  • Quality control of powders

Food & Consumer Products

  • Ingredient particle size consistency

  • Performance and appearance control

  • Troubleshooting processing issues

Failure Analysis & Troubleshooting

  • Investigation of flow, packing, or segregation problems

  • Comparison of “good vs. problematic” materials

  • Identification of agglomeration or processing-induced changes

Sample Types

Laser diffraction can be applied to:

  • dry powders and granules

  • liquid suspensions and dispersions

  • slurries and emulsions (case-dependent)

Xinbodi selects dry or wet dispersion methods based on material properties and analytical objectives to ensure reliable results.

What You Will Receive

Each laser diffraction project is delivered with a clear, structured report designed for engineering and quality decisions. A typical deliverable includes:

  • measurement objective and sample description

  • dispersion method and test conditions

  • particle size distribution curves

  • D10, D50, D90 and related statistics

  • comparison summaries (batch vs. batch, supplier vs. supplier)

  • interpretation of PSD results and their impact on performance

  • recommendations for process optimization or follow-up testing

Why Choose Xinbodi for Laser Diffraction?

  • Experience with a wide range of powders and dispersions

  • Proper dispersion strategy selection to avoid artifacts

  • Fast, repeatable, and statistically robust measurements

  • Clear interpretation beyond raw PSD curves

  • Support for R&D, QC, and troubleshooting

  • Confidential handling of proprietary materials and data

FAQs

Laser diffraction provides fast, volume-based PSD for large particle populations, while image-based methods provide particle shape information.

Yes. Agglomeration often appears as a shift in PSD or an increase in larger particle fractions.

Laser diffraction is generally non-destructive, though dispersion steps may alter weak agglomerates.

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