Particle size (grain size)

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Particle size, also called grain size, refers to the diameter of individual grains of sediment, or the lithified particles in clastic rocks. The term may also be applied to other granular materials. This is different from the crystallite size, which is the size of a single crystal inside the particles or grains. A single grain can be composed of several crystals. Granular material can range from very small colloidal particles, through clay, silt, sand, and gravel, to boulders.

Size ranges define limits of classes that are given names in the Wentworth scale (or Udden-Wentworth) used in the United States. The Krumbein phi (φ) scale, a modification of the Wentworth scale created by W. C. Krumbein, (Krumbein & Sloss 1963) is a logarithmic scale computed by the equation

\phi=-\log_2{D/Do}\,,

where

φ is the Krumbein phi scale,
D is the diameter of the particle,
Do is a reference diameter, equal to 1 mm to make the equation dimensionally consistent.

This equation can be rearranged to find diameter using φ:

D=Do \times 2^{-\phi}\,.
φ scaleSize range
(metric)
Size range
(inches)
Aggregate class
(Wentworth)
Other names
< -8> 256 mm> 10.1 inBoulder
-6 to -864–256 mm2.5–10.1 inCobble
-5 to -632–64 mm1.26–2.5 inVery coarse gravelPebble
-4 to -516–32 mm0.63–1.26 inCoarse gravelPebble
-3 to -48–16 mm0.31–0.63 inMedium gravelPebble
-2 to -34–8 mm0.157–0.31 inFine gravelPebble
-1 to -22–4 mm0.079–0.157 inVery fine gravelGranule
0 to -11–2 mm0.039–0.079 inVery coarse sand
1 to 00.5–1 mm0.020–0.039 inCoarse sand
2 to 10.25–0.5 mm0.010–0.020 inMedium sand
3 to 2125–250 µm0.0049–0.010 inFine sand
4 to 362.5–125 µm0.0025–0.0049 inVery fine sand
8 to 43.9–62.5 µm0.00015–0.0025 inSiltMud
> 8< 3.9 µm< 0.00015 inClayMud
>10< 1 µm< 0.000039 inColloidMud

In some schemes "gravel" is anything larger than sand (>2.0 mm), and includes "granule", "pebble", "cobble", and "boulder" in the above table. In this scheme, "pebble" covers the size range 4 to 64 mm (-2 to -6 φ).

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • W C Krumbein & L L Sloss, Stratigraphy and Sedimentation, 2nd edition (Freeman, San Francisco, 1963).
  • J A Udden, "Mechanical composition of clastic sediments", Bull. Geol. Soc. Am. 25:655–744 (1914).
  • C K Wentworth, "A scale of grade and class terms for clastic sediments", J. Geology 30:377–392 (1922).