Particle sizing for flowing colloidal suspensions using flow-differential dynamic microscopy
James A Richards, Vincent A Martinez, Jochen Arlt

TL;DR
This paper introduces flow-DDM, a novel microscopy analysis method that enables accurate particle sizing in flowing colloidal suspensions by decoupling flow effects from diffusive motion, applicable across different setups.
Contribution
The paper presents a new analysis scheme, flow-DDM, that extends differential dynamic microscopy to measure particle size in flowing conditions, overcoming previous limitations.
Findings
Flow-DDM accurately measures particle size at high flow speeds.
The method is applicable to multiple microscopy techniques and flow geometries.
Flow-DDM outperforms traditional DDM in dynamic, flowing samples.
Abstract
Particle size is a key variable in understanding the behaviour of the particulate products that underpin much of our modern lives. Typically obtained from suspensions at rest, measuring the particle size under flowing conditions would enable advances for in-line testing during manufacture and high-throughput testing during development. However, samples are often turbid, multiply scattering light and preventing the direct use of common sizing techniques. Differential dynamic microscopy (DDM) is a powerful technique for analysing video microscopy of such samples, measuring diffusion and hence particle size without the need to resolve individual particles while free of substantial user input. However, when applying DDM to a flowing sample, diffusive dynamics are rapidly dominated by flow effects, preventing particle sizing. Here, we develop "flow-DDM", a novel analysis scheme that combines…
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