text.skipToContent text.skipToNavigation

Malvern Panalytical 80.0mic/15ml POLYMER STA LTX4280A

Malvern Panalytical -- Item TECPIM000004867
Please add to cart & request for quote to see the price
Reserve Now    

Polystyrene latex standard for particle size verification and instrument performance checks. Provides a certified nominal particle diameter of 80.0 µm (LTX4280A) and is supplied as an aqueous suspension in a 15 ml dropper-tipped bottle for use with particle size analyzers and Zetasizer Nano series in laboratory settings; it can be used to perform installation tests and verify measurement accuracy. The suspension is formulated for easy dispersion and colloidal stability and is supplied with a Certificate of Calibration traceable to NIST.

Key Features:

  • Nominal particle diameter: 80.0 µm
  • Bottle volume: 15 ml aqueous suspension (dropper-tipped)
  • Material: polystyrene latex polymer spheres
  • Intended use: particle size verification and installation testing
  • Includes Certificate of Calibration with NIST traceability

Advantages:

  • Certified, traceable reference for verification and calibration of particle size instruments
  • Dropper-tipped 15 ml packaging enables convenient, reproducible dispensing and sample preparation
  • Highly uniform polystyrene spheres provide reproducible verification results
  • Formulated at low solids to facilitate dispersion and colloidal stability

Product Details

Overview
Model
Product Type Consumables
Part Number LTX4280A
Brand Malvern Panalytical
Gross Dimensions (WxDxH cm)
Net Dimensions (WxDxH cm)
Gross Weight (kg)
Net Weight (kg)
Specifications
More options are available. Please contact us for more information.
Document
More options are available. Please contact us for more information.
Videos

Malvern Panalytical

Malvern Panalytical instruments blend cutting-edge engineering with the latest advancements in data analytics and AI. This combination empowers industries and researchers to comprehend the world with unparalleled precision, from biomolecular structures to quantum dots.