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  2. Critical radius - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_radius

    Critical radius is the minimum particle size from which an aggregate is thermodynamically stable. In other words, it is the lowest radius formed by atoms or molecules clustering together (in a gas, liquid or solid matrix) before a new phase inclusion (a bubble, a droplet or a solid particle) is viable and begins to grow.

  3. Miniemulsion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miniemulsion

    There is a fundamental difference between traditional emulsion polymerisation and a miniemulsion polymerisation. Particle formation in the former is a mixture of micellar and homogeneous nucleation, particles formed via miniemulsion however are mainly formed by droplet nucleation. In the pharmaceutical industry, oil droplets act as tiny ...

  4. Particle size - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Particle_size

    Particle size is a notion introduced for comparing dimensions of solid particles (), liquid particles (), or gaseous particles ().The notion of particle size applies to particles in colloids, in ecology, in granular material (whether airborne or not), and to particles that form a granular material (see also grain size).

  5. Particle technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Particle_technology

    Particle velocity can be calculated using the Doppler frequency from any signal, while the phase difference between two detectors determines particle size. [ 3 ] Fraunhofer diffraction : When a particle is at least 10 times larger than the laser wavelength and the scattering angle is 30° or smaller, the light intensity distribution pattern can ...

  6. Particle-size distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Particle-size_distribution

    The Weibull distribution or Rosin–Rammler distribution is a useful distribution for representing particle size distributions generated by grinding, milling and crushing operations. The log-hyperbolic distribution was proposed by Bagnold and Barndorff-Nielsen [9] to model the particle-size distribution of naturally occurring sediments. This ...

  7. Self-assembly of nanoparticles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-assembly_of_nanoparticles

    The top-down approach is breaking down of a system into small components, while bottom-up is assembling sub-systems into larger system. [15] A bottom-up approach for nano-assembly is a primary research target for nano-fabrication because top down synthesis is expensive (requiring external work) and is not selective on very small length scales, but is currently the primary mode of industrial ...

  8. Particle size analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Particle_size_analysis

    Particle-size analysis also helps the effectiveness of SAG Mills when crushing material. In the building industry, the particle size can directly affect the strength of the final material, as it observed for cement. [18] Two of the most used techniques used for the particle size characterization of minerals are sieving and laser diffraction.

  9. Characterization of nanoparticles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Characterization_of_nano...

    Particle size is the external dimensions of a particle, and dispersity is a measure of the range of particle sizes in a sample. If the particle is elongated or irregularly shaped, the size will differ between dimensions, although many measurement techniques yield an equivalent spherical diameter based on the surrogate property being measured.