Measuring Non-spherical objects with Dynamic Light Scattering
How can we deal with non-spherical DLS? Nature does not always present us with perfect spheres. Quite often, nanoparticles are only approximately spherical. So what happens if we try to measure the hydrodynamic size of a non-spherical object? How can DLS deal with this scenario? Find out if we can measure non-spherical nanosheets in this highlight of an interesting comparison to TEM data. Let’s dive into non-spherical DLS.
Hydrodynamic size – assumes a sphere – does it?
“The Hydrodynamic size – either the hydrodynamic radius or hydrodynamic diameter – is the size of a sphere that diffuses with the same diffusion coefficient.” So on the face of it, it seems to imply we always require spheres. But that is not so: the hydrodynamic size is an equivalent spherical size. It does not require the object to be spherical. The size is just the theoretical size of a sphere.
Can we do non-spherical DLS? If the object is not spherical we can still simplify and think of it as a sphere, an equivalent sphere. If only for the purpose of interpreting our dynamic light scattering data. So we can certainly do non-spherical DLS, it is just a matter of how we interpret the data correctly.
Non-spherical DLS from Nanosheets – small disks with two dimensions
As an example of a non-spherical particle, we can consider a cylinder or disk: here we have two dimensions, a length/diameter L and a thickness t. The hydrodynamic volume of this object is proportional to size Dh3 and also proportional to t*L2. So if we are dealing with non-spherical nanosheets of similar thickness t, the hydrodynamic size is expected to be
Dh ~ L2/3
In a paper titled “Measuring the lateral size of liquid-exfoliated nanosheets with dynamic light scattering” Mustafa Lotya et al. confirmed this experimentally. They prepared a series of layered materials (graphene, molybdenum disulfide, tungsten disulfide) in N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone (NMP) and N-cyclohexyl-2-pyrrolidone (CHP) by horn tip sonication. Then they centrifuged at various rates to tune nanosheet size, and measure it by TEM and DLS. As a result, they experimentally find for a range of nanosheets that the following relation holds:
where
Want to dive in even more into non-spherical shape?
The latest Zetasizer has two components that may extend the usability of the nanosheet length estimate even further than before:
- Adaptive correlation can classify steady state data from a somewhat noisy, non-ideal sample
- Polarization may allow extra information about the shape
It may be surprising that a technique with a few decades of history still provides plenty of areas to discover, and shape is one of them. The above two points are possible through faster processors and through the easy-to-use integration of polarizers into the latest hardware.
If you want to learn even more about non-spherical DLS and how shape affects dynamic light scattering: check out references to the Perrin Shape or Perrin friction factor. A brief summary in “Can you get shape information from DLS?” contains an overview.
Previously
- How you can calculate standard deviation for size
- To order consumables, you can get a quote for consumables. 24/7.
- The easiest method to get Help for your instrument – one step away
Have any questions about “non-spherical DLS” ? Please email me ulf.nobbmann@malvern.com – Thanks! Opinions are those of the author. Our editorial team modifies them occasionally.