Keeping an overview in the world of aerosols and particles
In this online glossary we provide interested readers with an overview of technical terms and foreign words from our area of expertise, particle and aerosol technology.
All terms mentioned here are formulated in accordance with the standards listed.
A
An aerosol is a “[metastable, disperse] system of solid and/or liquid particles [dispersed] in gas”. In simple words, an aerosol is a mixture of droplets and/or solid particles, which are spatial distributed in gas.
ISO 15900:2009 ISO/TS 80004 6:2021 ISO 21683:2019
- Synonyms: fog, smoke, smog
As defined by Topas GmbH, an aerosol substance is the solid, liquid or gaseous primary material for the generation of aerosols.
Depending on the application, aerosol substances can be pure liquids, solutions, suspensions or specific gases.
An aggregate is a particulate/granular entity composed of individual solid particles, which are so strongly bounded or fused together that a further dispersion is not possible.
Note that the term aggregate is defined differently depending on the discipline or specific application.
ISO 8780-1:1990 ISO 19430:2016 ISO 23900-1:2015 ISO 26824:2022 ISO 29464:2017
- Synonyms: smallest dispersible unit
C
A cleanroom is a room or microenvironment in which the number of airborne or deposited particles is controlled.
Cleanrooms are operated i.a. for the preparation of medical drugs, for the manufacturing of electronic components, for the production of food or within healthcare.
ISO 14644-1:2015 ISO14698-2:2003 ISO 15378:2017 ISO 15388:2022 ISO 16232:2018
- Synonyms: clean room, cleanroom installation, safety cabinet, laminar flow bench, operating theatre, isolator
D
Dispersing is a process where an exterior energy supply serves for the generation of a disperse system.
Examples for dispersing are: spraying of liquids, swirl desert dust or supply of air into water (whirlpool).
- Synonyms: disperse, mixing, distributing
F
A filter resp. filter element serves for the removal of particulate and/or gaseous contaminations from fluids and is typically composed of one or more layers of filter medium (partly formed) as well as an outer frame. For stabilisation, an inner supporting structure is often present.
Nowadays, filters are categorised i.a. by their separation mechanism (e.g. electro filter, electret filter), their structure/design (e.g. bag filter, filter cartridge), their application (e.g. diesel particle filter, ambient air filter) or their separation efficiency (e.g. coarse dust filter, fine particle filter, HEPA).
ISO 5011:2020 ISO 9912-1:2004 ISO 11841-1:2000 ISO 16890 Normreihe ISO 29461-2:2022 ISO 29463-1:2017 ISO 29464:2017
- Synonyms: Filterelement
A filter medium is the primary material of filters that serves for removal of particulate and/or gaseous contaminations from fluids.
These are often flat, porous or fibrous materials. Filter media also include granular materials (e.g. activated carbon), solid foams (e.g. ceramic filters) or specific coatings.
ISO 9912-1:2004 ISO 11057:2011 ISO 11933-4:2001 ISO 16170:2016 ISO 16891:2016 ISO 21018-1:2008 ISO 29463-1:2017 ISO 29464:2017
- Synonyms: filter media, filtering material
The filtration efficiency is the ability of a filter or filter medium to retain specific contaminants (particles and/or gases) under defined conditions (ISO 3857-4:2012, ISO 4548-12:2017, ISO 19438:2023). Separation efficiencies are used as descriptive parameter, which can be determined by evaluating the quantity of the contaminant before, on and/or after the filter/filter element.
Separation efficiencies can be determined over the entire test specimen (separation efficiency) or partial areas (local separation efficiency). For particulate contaminants, a differentiation between particle-size-resolved (fractional separation efficiency) and non-particle-size-resolved (integral separation efficiency) separation is used. The types and terms of specific separation efficiency used depend fundamentally on the field of application.
ISO 3857-4:2012 ISO 4548-12:2017 ISO 19438:2023
- Synonyms: separation efficiency, filter efficiency
The fractional separation efficiency is a descriptive parameter for filter efficiency/separator efficiency of particulate contaminants. For this, the quantity of retained particles is determined size-resolved (at least two size fractions.
Fractionated (monodisperse, quasi-monodisperse) or non-fractionated (polydisperse) particle systems (aerosols, suspensions, emulsions) can be used to determine the fractional separation efficiency. In the case of fractionated particle systems only concentration analyses are necessary, whereas non-fractionated particle systems require in addition the determination of the particle size distribution.
ISO 11841-2:2000 ISO 16890-1:2016 ISO 16890-2:2016 ISO 17536-4:2019 ISO 17536-5:2019 ISO 29463-1:2017 ISO 29464:2017
- Synonyms: particle size efficiency, fractional filtration efficiency, size-specific separation efficiency
G
I
L
M
A monomodal particle size distribution shows in the density function only one maximum and in the cumulative function only one point of inflection.
Please note that the terms monomodal and monodisperse have different meanings.
VDI 3491-1:2005 ISO/TS 4807:2022
- Synonyms: simple modal
A multimodal particle size distribution shows in the density function more than one maximum and in the cumulative function several points of inflection.
VDI 3491-1:2005
O
P
A particle is defined as a “minute piece of matter minute piece of matter with defined physical boundaries” or “discrete element of […] material regardless of size”.
Particles are solid, liquid or gaseous objects, which are spatial distributed within solid materials, liquids or gases. This includes cereals in milk (suspension), dust in the air (aerosol), oily droplets in milk (emulsion), airborne water droplets (fog, aerosol) or wholes in cheese (solid foam).
ISO 14644-1:2015 ISO 14644-13:2017 ISO/TS 19807-1:2019 ISO/TS 80004-2:2015
ISO 2395:1990 ISO 21501-1:2009
- Synonyms: granules, piece, particulate matter
S
The separation efficiency is a descriptive parameter for the filtration efficiency against gaseous and/or particulate contaminants under defined conditions. It describes the average separation of the contaminant either over the entire test specimen (integral separation efficiency) or over a limited area (local separation efficiency).
In the case of particulate contaminants, the separation efficiency is considered only for a single size range (i.e., non-particle-size-resolved). The separation efficiency depends on the state of dispersion of the applied particle system and on the measuring principle as well as the measuring range of the analytical instruments. This leads to a dependency on the type of quantity and can thus cause significant differences in determined values. Accordingly, a separation efficiency determined by weighing is referred to as gravimetric separation efficiency (also denoted as arrestance).
ISO 16890-1:2016 ISO 21904-1:2020 ISO 29042-1:2010 ISO 29042-5:2010 ISO 29042-6:2010 ISO 29464:2017
- Synonyms: total separation efficiency, total separation efficiency
A solution is a homogeneous, single-phase mixture composed of a solvent and at least one dissolved substance (solute).
Typical examples of liquid solutions are sugar water, isotonic sodium chloride solutions and spiritous beverages.
ISO 13457:2021
A suspension is defined as a “two-phase system in which one phase, the [solid] disperse phase, is distributed throughout the other, known as the [liquid] continuous phase”.
In simple words, a suspension describes a mixture of spatial distributed solid particles in a surrounding liquid.
Combination of:
ISO 29464:2017 ISO 472:2013 ISO/TS 80004-6:2021 ISO 18473-4:2022 ISO4618:2023 ISO/TS 19807-1:2019 ISO/TS 19808:2020
- Synonyms: dispersion