Dynamic Light Scattering: An Introduction in 30 Minutes

Introduction

D ynamic L ight S cattering (DLS), sometimes referred to as P hoton C orrelation S pectroscopy or Q uasi-Elastic L ight S cattering, is a technique classically used for measuring the size of particles typically in the sub-micron region, dispersed in a liquid. The sensitivity of some modern systems is such that it can also now be used to measure the size of macromolecules in solution, e.g. proteins

Brownian Motion

DLS measures Brownian motion and relates this to the size of the particles. Brownian motion is the random movement of particles due to the bombardment by the solvent molecules that surround them. The larger the particle or molecule, the slower the Brownian motion will be. Smaller particles are "kicked" further by the solvent molecules and move more rapidly. An accurately known temperature is necessary for DLS because knowledge of the viscosity is required (because the viscosity of a liquid is related to its temperature). The temperature also needs to be stable, otherwise convection currents in the sample will cause non-random movements that will ruin the correct interpretation of size.

The velocity of the Brownian motion is defined by a property known as the translational diffusion coefficient (usually given the symbol, D).

The Hydrodynamic Diameter

The size of a particle is calculated from the translational diffusion

coefficient by using the Stokes-Einstein equation;

mrk656 equation1

where:-

d(H) = hydrodynamic diameter

D = translational diffusion coefficient

k = Boltzmann's constant

T = absolute temperature

η = viscosity

Note that the diameter that is measured in DLS is a value that refers to how a particle diffuses within a fluid so it is referred to as a hydrodynamic diameter. The diameter that is obtained by this technique is the diameter of a sphere that has the same translational diffusion coefficient as the particle.

The particle translational diffusion coefficient will depend not only on the size of the particle "core", but also on any surface structure that will affect the diffusion speed, as well as the concentration and type of ions in the medium. Factors that can affect the diffusion speed discussed in the following sections.

Ionic Strength of Medium

The ions in the medium and the total ionic concentration can affect the particle diffusion speed by changing the thickness of the electric double layer which is called the Debye length (K-1). Thus a low conductivity medium will produce an extended double layer of ions around the particle, reducing the diffusion speed and resulting in a larger, apparent hydrodynamic diameter. Conversely, higher conductivity media will suppress the electrical double layer reducing the measured hydrodynamic diameter.

The performance of a DLS instrument is normally verified by measurement of a suitable polystyrene latex standard. If the standard needs to be diluted prior to measurement, then dilution in an appropriate medium is important. The International Standard on DLS (ISO22412:2008) says that dilution of any polystyrene standard should be made in 10mM NaCl. This concentration of salt will suppress the electrical double layer and ensure that the hydrodynamic diameter reported will be the same as the hydrodynamic diameter on the certificate or the expected diameter. For a 60nm monodisperse latex, dispersion in demineralised water rather than 10mM NaCl can result in 15% higher size reported.


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Introduction

D ynamic L ight S cattering (DLS), sometimes referred to as P hoton C orrelation S pectroscopy or Q uasi-Elastic L ight S cattering, is a technique classically used for measuring the size of particles typically in the sub-micron region, dispersed in a liquid. The sensitivity of some modern systems is such that it can also now be used to measure the size of macromolecules in solution, e.g. proteins

Brownian Motion

DLS measures Brownian motion and relates this to the size of the particles. Brownian motion is the random movement of particles due to the bombardment by the solvent molecules that surround them. The larger the particle or molecule, the slower the Brownian motion will be. Smaller particles are "kicked" further by the solvent molecules and move more rapidly. An accurately known temperature is necessary for DLS because knowledge of the viscosity is required (because the viscosity of a liquid is related to its temperature). The temperature also needs to be stable, otherwise convection currents in the sample will cause non-random movements that will ruin the correct interpretation of size.

The velocity of the Brownian motion is defined by a property known as the translational diffusion coefficient (usually given the symbol, D).

The Hydrodynamic Diameter

The size of a particle is calculated from the translational diffusion

coefficient by using the Stokes-Einstein equation;

mrk656 equation1

where:-

d(H) = hydrodynamic diameter

D = translational diffusion coefficient

k = Boltzmann's constant

T = absolute temperature

η = viscosity

Note that the diameter that is measured in DLS is a value that refers to how a particle diffuses within a fluid so it is referred to as a hydrodynamic diameter. The diameter that is obtained by this technique is the diameter of a sphere that has the same translational diffusion coefficient as the particle.

The particle translational diffusion coefficient will depend not only on the size of the particle "core", but also on any surface structure that will affect the diffusion speed, as well as the concentration and type of ions in the medium. Factors that can affect the diffusion speed discussed in the following sections.

Ionic Strength of Medium

The ions in the medium and the total ionic concentration can affect the particle diffusion speed by changing the thickness of the electric double layer which is called the Debye length (K-1). Thus a low conductivity medium will produce an extended double layer of ions around the particle, reducing the diffusion speed and resulting in a larger, apparent hydrodynamic diameter. Conversely, higher conductivity media will suppress the electrical double layer reducing the measured hydrodynamic diameter.

The performance of a DLS instrument is normally verified by measurement of a suitable polystyrene latex standard. If the standard needs to be diluted prior to measurement, then dilution in an appropriate medium is important. The International Standard on DLS (ISO22412:2008) says that dilution of any polystyrene standard should be made in 10mM NaCl. This concentration of salt will suppress the electrical double layer and ensure that the hydrodynamic diameter reported will be the same as the hydrodynamic diameter on the certificate or the expected diameter. For a 60nm monodisperse latex, dispersion in demineralised water rather than 10mM NaCl can result in 15% higher size reported.

Surface Structure

Any change to the surface of a particle that affects the diffusion speed will correspondingly change the apparent size of the particle. An adsorbed polymer layer projecting out into the medium will reduce the diffusion speed more than if the polymer is lying flat on the surface. The nature of the surface and the polymer, as well as the ionic concentration of the medium can affect the polymer conformation, which in turn can change the apparent size by several nanometres.

Non-Spherical Particles

All particle-sizing techniques have an inherent problem in describing the size of non-spherical particles. The sphere is the only object whose size can be unambiguously described by a single figure.

 Different techniques are sensitive to different properties of the particle, e.g. projected area, density, scattering intensity, and in general will produce different mean sizes and size distributions for any given sample. Even the size in a microscope image will depend on parameters set such as edge contrast etc. It is important to understand that none of these results are inherently "correct".

The hydrodynamic diameter of a non-spherical particle is the diameter of a sphere that has the same translational diffusion speed as the particle.

If the shape of a particle changes in a way that affects the diffusion speed, then the hydrodynamic size will change. For example, small changes in the length of a rod-shaped particle will directly affect the size, whereas changes in the rod's diameter, which will hardly affect the diffusion speed, will be difficult to detect.

The conformation of proteins and macromolecules are usually dependent on the exact nature of the dispersing medium. As conformational changes will usually affect the diffusion speed, DLS is a very sensitive technique for detecting these changes.

Light Scattering Theories

Rayleigh Scattering

If the particles are small compared to the wavelength of the laser used (typically less than d =λ/10 or around 60nm for a He-Ne laser), then the scattering from a particle illuminated by a vertically polarized laser will be essentially isotropic, i.e. equal in all directions.

The Rayleigh approximation tells us that I α d6 and also that I α 1/λ4, where I = intensity of light scattered, d = particle diameter and λ = laser wavelength. The d6 term tells us that a 50nm particle will scatter 106 or one million times as much light as a 5nm particle. Hence there is a danger that the light from the larger particles will swamp the scattered light from the smaller ones. This d6 factor also means it is difficult with DLS to measure, say, a mixture of 1000nm and 10nm particles because the contribution to the total light scattered by the small particles will be extremely small. The inverse relationship to λ4 means that a higher scattering intensity is obtained as the wavelength of the laser used decreases.

Mie Theory

When the size of the particles becomes roughly equivalent to the wavelength of the illuminating light, then a plot of intensity as a function of scattering angle forms a complex function of maxima and minima.

Figure 1 shows the theoretical plot of the log of the relative scattering intensity versus particle size at angles of 173° (the detection angle of the Zetasizer Nano S and Nano ZS in aqueous media) and 90° (the detection angle of the Nano S90 and Nano ZS90) assuming a laser wavelength of 633nm, real refractive index of 1.59 and an imaginary refractive index of 0.001.Mie theory is the only theory that explains correctly the maxima and minima in the plot of intensity with angle and will give the correct answer over all wavelengths, sizes and angles. Mie theory is used in the Nano software for conversion of the intensity distribution into volume.

Figure 1: Theoretical plot of the log of the relative intensity of scattering versus particle size at angles of 173° (Nano S, and Nano ZS in aqueous media) and 90° (Nano S90 and Nano ZS90) assuming a laser beam with wavelength of 633nm, real RI 1.59 and imaginary RI 0.001
mrk656 fig1

How DLS Works

In dynamic light scattering, the speed at which the particles diffuse due to Brownian motion is measured. This is done by determining the rate at which the intensity of the scattered light fluctuates when detected using a suitable optical arrangement. How do these fluctuations in the intensity of scattered light arise?

Imagine if a cuvette, containing particles which are stationary, is illuminated by a laser and a frosted glass screen is used to view the sample cell. A classical speckle pattern would be seen (figure 2). The speckle pattern will be stationary both in speckle size and position because the whole system is stationary. The dark spaces are where the phase additions of the scattered light are mutually destructive and cancel each other out (figure 3A). The bright blobs of light in the speckle pattern are where the light scattered from the particles arrives with the same phase and interfere constructively to form a bright patch (figure 3B).

Figure 2: Schematic representation of a speckle pattern
mrk656 fig 2
Figure 3: The observed signal depends on the phase addition of the scattered light falling on the detector. In A, two beams are in opposite phase and 'cancel each other out' resulting in zero intensity detected. In B, the two beams are in phase and 'enhance each other' resulting in a sum of the intensity detected.
mrk656 fig 3

For a system of particles undergoing Brownian motion, a speckle pattern is observed where the position of each speckle is seen to be in constant motion. This is because the phase addition from the moving particles is constantly evolving and forming new patterns. The rate at which these intensity fluctuations occur will depend on the speed, and hence the size of the particles. Figure 4 schematically illustrates typical intensity fluctuations arising from a dispersion of large particles and a dispersion of small particles. The small particles cause the intensity to fluctuate more rapidly than the large ones.

Figure 4: Typical intensity fluctuations for large and small particles
mrk656 fig4

It is possible to directly measure the spectrum of frequencies contained in the intensity fluctuations arising from the Brownian motion of particles, but it is inefficient to do so. The best way is to use a device called a digital autocorrelator.

How a Correlator Works

A correlator is basically a signal comparator. It is designed to measure the degree of similarity between two signals, or one signal with itself at varying time intervals.

If the intensity of a signal is compared with itself at time zero, then the two signals will be perfectly correlated.

If we look at the signal at a later time, the signal will have changed, hence the correlation reduced. For a truly random signal, the correlation will always reduce until and at some point the signal will bear no relationship to the original signal and correlation will be zero. The time taken for this correlation to decay is characteristic of the diffusion speed, and hence the size of the particles.

Figure 5: Schematic showing the fluctuation in the intensity of scattered light as a function of time
mrk656 fig5

The way the scheme works mathematically is to measure the intensity at a number of fixed time intervals, t, t+δt, t+2δt, t+3δt, etc. where δt is in the order of nanoseconds or microseconds, and monitor how the correlation of the signal decays over these time periods.

The important concept of the autocorrelator is that we are not comparing the intensities at discrete times, but comparing the history of the signal, over a significant time, as long as seconds, with the whole signal nanoseconds or microseconds later. This requires a large number of parallel multiplications in real time, and is the reason for dedicated hardware for this task.

The multiplication of the, say 2 seconds of signal, with the 2 seconds of signal 25ns later results in one point on the correlogram at 25ns. This is repeated at a number of later times to build up a correlation of the signal called a correlation function.

If the particles are large the signal will be changing slowly and the correlation will persist for a long time (figure 6). If the particles are small and moving rapidly then correlation will reduce more quickly (figure 7).

These correlation functions are plotted with time on a log scale to help visualise decay rates that differ by orders of magnitude onto the same scale.

Figure 6: Typical correlogram from a sample containing large particles in which the correlation of the signal takes milliseconds to decay
mrk656 fig6
Figure 7: Typical correlogram from a sample containing small particles in which the correlation of the signal decays over 10's of microseconds
mrk656 fig7

Viewing the correlogram from a measurement can give a lot of information about the sample. The time at which the correlation starts to significantly decay is an indication of the mean size of the sample. The steeper the curve, the more monodisperse the sample is. Conversely, the more extended the decay becomes, the greater the sample polydispersity.

The Correlation Function

It has been seen that particles in a dispersion are in a constant, random Brownian motion and that this causes the intensity of scattered light to fluctuate as a function of time. The correlator used in a DLS instrument will construct the correlation function G(τ) of the scattered intensity:

G(τ) = <I(t).I(t+τ)>
Where τ =the time difference (the sample time) of the correlator.

For a large number of monodisperse particles in Brownian motion, the correlation function (given the symbol [G]) is an exponential decaying function of the correlator time delay t:

 G(τ) = A[1 + B exp(-2Γτ)]

where A = the baseline of the correlation function, B = intercept of the correlation function.

Γ = Dq2

where D = translational diffusion coefficient

q = (4 π n / λ0) sin (θ/2)

where n = refractive index of dispersant, λ0 = wavelength of the laser, θ  = scattering angle.

For polydisperse samples, the equation can be written as:

 G(τ) = A[1 + B g1(τ)2]

where g1(τ) = is the sum of all the exponential decays contained in the correlation function.

Obtaining Size Information From the Correlation Function

Size is obtained from the correlation function using various algorithms. There are two fundamentally different approaches that are often taken (1) fit a single exponential to the correlation function to obtain the mean size (z-average diameter) and an estimate of the width of the distribution (polydispersity index) (this is called the Cumulants analysis and is defined in ISO22412:2008), and (2) fit a multiple exponential to the correlation function to obtain the distribution of particle sizes (such as Non-negative least squares (NNLS) or CONTIN.

The Z-Average diameter, sometimes call the cumulants mean, is used for the analysis of monodisperse or narrow distributions.

The multi exponential fit is more appropriate to broader and multi-modal distributions, and needs significantly more data to determine a repeatable result.

The size distribution obtained in this second case is a plot of the relative intensity of light scattered by particles in various size classes and is therefore known as an intensity size distribution.

If this plot shows a substantial tail, or more than one peak, then Mie theory can make use of the input  of sample refractive index and sample absorbance to convert the intensity distribution to a volume distribution, or even a number distribution. This will then give a view of the importance of the tail or second peak present that is easier to compare with other techniques. In general terms it will be seen that:-

d(intensity) > d(volume) > d(number)

A very simple way of describing the difference between intensity, volume and number distributions is to consider 2 populations of spherical particles of diameter 5nm and 50nm present in equal numbers (figure 8). If a number distribution of these 2 particle populations is plotted, a plot consisting of 2 peaks (positioned at 5 and 50nm) of a 1 to 1 ratio would be obtained. If this number distribution was converted into volume, then the 2 peaks would change to a 1:1000 ratio (because the volume of a sphere is equal to 4/3π(d/2)3). If this was further converted into an intensity distribution, a 1:1000000 ratio between the 2 peaks would be obtained (because the intensity of scattering is proportional to d6 (from Rayleighs approximation)). Remember that in DLS, the distribution obtained from a measurement is based on intensity.

This then indicates the essential use of a light scattering technique, in that it is extremely sensitive to the presence of larger particles in a sample, giving early indictions of the nstability of a formulation for example.

Figure 8: Number, volume and intensity distributions of a bimodal mixture of 5 and 50nm lattices present in equal numbers
mrk656 fig8

Optical Configuration of a Dynamic Light Scattering Instrument

A typical dynamic light scattering system comprises of six main components. Firstly, a laser provides a light source to illuminate the sample contained in a cell. For dilute materials, most of the laser beam passes through the sample, but some light will be scattered by the particles within the sample at all angles. A detector is used to measure the intensity of the scattered light. In the Zetasizer Nano series, the detector position will be at either 173° or 90°, depending upon the particular model.

Figure 9: Optical configurations of the Zetasizer Nano series for dynamic light scattering measurements
mrk656 fig9

The intensity of scattered light must be within a specific range for the detector to successfully measure it. If too much light is detected, then the detector will become saturated. To overcome this, an attenuator is used to reduce the intensity of the laser source and hence reduce the intensity of scattering. For samples that do not scatter much light, such as very small particles or samples of low concentration, the amount of scattered light must be increased. In this situation, the attenuator will allow more laser light through to the sample.

For samples that scatter more light, such as large particles or samples at higher concentration, the intensity of scattered light must be decreased. The appropriate attenuator position is automatically determined by the Nano software and covers a transmission range of 100% to 0.0003%.

The scattering intensity signal from the detector is passed to a digital processing board called a correlator. The correlator compares the scattering intensity at successive time intervals to derive the rate at which the intensity is varying. This correlator information is then passed to a computer, where the Nano software will analyze the data and derive size information.

Unique Features of the Zetasizer Nano

Non-Invasive Backscatter Detection (NIBS)

The Nano ZSP, Nano ZS and Nano S instruments detect the scattering information at 173°. This is known as backscatter detection. In addition, the optics are not in contact with the sample and hence the detection optics are said to be non-invasive. There are several advantages in using non-invasive backscatter detection:

  • The laser does not have to travel through the entire sample. This reduces an effect called multiple scattering, where light from one particle is itself scattered by other particles. As the light passes through a shorter path length of the sample, then higher concentrations of sample can be measured.
  • Contaminants such as dust particles within the dispersant are typically large compared to the sample size. Large particles mainly scatter in the forward direction. Therefore, by using backscatter detection, the effects of dust are greatly reduced.

Variable Measurement Position For Sizing

The measurement position within the cuvette of the Nano ZSP, Nano ZS and Nano S can be changed. This measurement position is changed by moving the focusing lens and the correct position is determined automatically by the Zetasizer Nano software (figure 10).

Figure 10: Schematic diagram showing the measurement position for (a) small, weakly scattering samples and for (b) concentrated, opaque samples. The change in measurement position is achieved by moving the focusing lens
mrk656 fig10

For small particles, or samples at low concentrations, it is beneficial to maximize the amount of scattering from the sample. As the laser passes through the wall of the cuvette and into the dispersant, the laser will cause "flare".

 This flare may swamp the signal from the scattering particles. Moving the measurement point away from the cuvette wall towards the center of the cuvette will remove this effect (figure 10a).

Large particles or samples at high concentrations scatter much more light. In this situation, measuring closer to the cuvette wall will reduce the effect of multiple scattering by minimizing the path length over which the scattered light has to pass (figure 10b). In this case flare is a very minor component of the signal. The measurement position is determined automatically through a combination of the intercept of the correlation function and the intensity of the light scattered.

Additional Reading

[1] International Standard ISO22412:2008  Particle Size Analysis, Dynamic Light Scattering (DLS)

[2] Dahneke, B.E. (ed) Measurement of Suspended Particles by Quasi-elastic Light Scattering, Wiley, 1983.

[3] Pecora, R. Dynamic Light Scattering: Applications of Photon Correlation Spectroscopy, Plenum Press, 1985.

[4] Washington, C. Particle Size Analysis In Pharmaceutics And Other Industries: Theory And Practice, Ellis Horwood, England, 1992.

[5] Johnson, C.S. Jr. and Gabriel, D.A. Laser Light Scattering, Dover Publications, Inc., New York 1981

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