Light scattering studies of irregularly shaped particles

Doctor of Philosophy === Physics === Christopher M. Sorensen === We present light scattering studies of irregularly shaped particles which significantly affect the climate. We built and calibrated our apparatus which was able to measure all six independent scattering matrix elements. Our apparatus d...

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Main Author: Heinson, Yuli Wang
Language:en_US
Published: Kansas State University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2097/32517
id ndltd-KSU-oai-krex.k-state.edu-2097-32517
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spelling ndltd-KSU-oai-krex.k-state.edu-2097-325172018-07-24T03:52:16Z Light scattering studies of irregularly shaped particles Heinson, Yuli Wang Light scattering Q-space analysis Guinier analysis Irregular Shapes Universal behavior Doctor of Philosophy Physics Christopher M. Sorensen We present light scattering studies of irregularly shaped particles which significantly affect the climate. We built and calibrated our apparatus which was able to measure all six independent scattering matrix elements. Our apparatus detects light from 0.32° to 157° simultaneously. We studied all six scattering matrix elements of irregularly shaped Arizona Road Dust which behave differently than those of spheres. We strongly focused on the most important scattering matrix element – the phase function, scattered intensity vs. the scattering angle, which we applied Q-space analysis to. Q-space analysis involves plotting the scattering intensity vs. the magnitude of the scattering wave vector q or qR with R the radius of a particle, on a double logarithmic scale. We measured and studied the phase functions of Al₂O₃ abrasives; compared the scattering from the abrasives with the scattering of spheres. To generalize the study, we collected a large amount of experimental and theoretical data from our group and others and applied Q-space analysis. They all displayed a common scattering pattern. The power law exponents showed a quasi-universal functionality with the internal coupling parameter ρ'. In situ studies of the soot fractal aggregates produced from a burner were also conducted. A power law exponent -1.85 is seen to imply the aggregates have fractal dimension of D[subscript f]=1.85. The overall work presented shows Q-space analysis uncovers patterns common to all particles: a q-independent forward scattering regime is followed by a Guinier regime, a power law regime, and sometimes an enhanced back scattering regime. The description of the patterns applies to spheres as well, except the power law regime has more than a single power law. These simple patterns give a unified description for all particle shapes. Moreover, the power law exponents have a quasi-universal functionality with ρ' for non-fractal aggregates. The absolute value of the exponents start from 4 when ρ' is small. As ρ' increases, the exponents decrease until the trend levels off at ρ'≳10 where the exponents reach a constant 1.75±0.25. All the non-fractal particles fall on the same trend regardless of the detail of their structure. 2016-04-18T20:08:33Z 2016-04-18T20:08:33Z 2016-05-01 2016 May Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2097/32517 en_US Kansas State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Light scattering
Q-space analysis
Guinier analysis
Irregular Shapes
Universal behavior
spellingShingle Light scattering
Q-space analysis
Guinier analysis
Irregular Shapes
Universal behavior
Heinson, Yuli Wang
Light scattering studies of irregularly shaped particles
description Doctor of Philosophy === Physics === Christopher M. Sorensen === We present light scattering studies of irregularly shaped particles which significantly affect the climate. We built and calibrated our apparatus which was able to measure all six independent scattering matrix elements. Our apparatus detects light from 0.32° to 157° simultaneously. We studied all six scattering matrix elements of irregularly shaped Arizona Road Dust which behave differently than those of spheres. We strongly focused on the most important scattering matrix element – the phase function, scattered intensity vs. the scattering angle, which we applied Q-space analysis to. Q-space analysis involves plotting the scattering intensity vs. the magnitude of the scattering wave vector q or qR with R the radius of a particle, on a double logarithmic scale. We measured and studied the phase functions of Al₂O₃ abrasives; compared the scattering from the abrasives with the scattering of spheres. To generalize the study, we collected a large amount of experimental and theoretical data from our group and others and applied Q-space analysis. They all displayed a common scattering pattern. The power law exponents showed a quasi-universal functionality with the internal coupling parameter ρ'. In situ studies of the soot fractal aggregates produced from a burner were also conducted. A power law exponent -1.85 is seen to imply the aggregates have fractal dimension of D[subscript f]=1.85. The overall work presented shows Q-space analysis uncovers patterns common to all particles: a q-independent forward scattering regime is followed by a Guinier regime, a power law regime, and sometimes an enhanced back scattering regime. The description of the patterns applies to spheres as well, except the power law regime has more than a single power law. These simple patterns give a unified description for all particle shapes. Moreover, the power law exponents have a quasi-universal functionality with ρ' for non-fractal aggregates. The absolute value of the exponents start from 4 when ρ' is small. As ρ' increases, the exponents decrease until the trend levels off at ρ'≳10 where the exponents reach a constant 1.75±0.25. All the non-fractal particles fall on the same trend regardless of the detail of their structure.
author Heinson, Yuli Wang
author_facet Heinson, Yuli Wang
author_sort Heinson, Yuli Wang
title Light scattering studies of irregularly shaped particles
title_short Light scattering studies of irregularly shaped particles
title_full Light scattering studies of irregularly shaped particles
title_fullStr Light scattering studies of irregularly shaped particles
title_full_unstemmed Light scattering studies of irregularly shaped particles
title_sort light scattering studies of irregularly shaped particles
publisher Kansas State University
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2097/32517
work_keys_str_mv AT heinsonyuliwang lightscatteringstudiesofirregularlyshapedparticles
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