Did you know 42% of lab technicians report measurement inconsistencies with conventional particle sensors? In precision-driven industries like pharmaceuticals and semiconductor manufacturing, outdated equipment costs companies an average $1.2M annually in quality control failures. Your optical analysis deserves better.
(optical polarimeter)
Modern optical polarimeter
systems achieve 0.01° angular resolution - 15x sharper than standard optical particle sensors. Our AX-9000 series delivers:
Feature | Standard Sensors | Our Polarimeter |
---|---|---|
Measurement Speed | 1.8s/sample | 0.25s/sample |
Calibration Cycles | Weekly | Bi-annually |
Whether you're measuring nanoparticle suspensions or monitoring cleanroom particulates, our optical particle counter sensors adapt to your needs:
Reduced batch rejection rates by 68% for Top-10 drug manufacturer through real-time chiral compound analysis.
Enabled 2nm chip production monitoring with sub-micron particle detection.
Since 2012, OptiMeasure Labs has equipped 1,400+ facilities with award-winning optical polarimeter solutions. Why settle for "good enough" when you can achieve lab-grade accuracy on the production floor?
Ready for Unmatched Precision?
Claim Your Free System Demo →
(optical polarimeter)
A: An optical polarimeter measures the polarization state of light. It is widely used in material science, chemistry, and astronomy to analyze optical activity or birefringence in substances.
A: An optical particle sensor detects and counts airborne particles by scattering light. It uses a light source and detector to measure particle concentration and size in real-time.
A: An optical polarimeter analyzes light polarization, while an optical particle counter sensor focuses on detecting and sizing particles via light scattering. Their applications differ based on these functionalities.
A: Optical particle counter sensors offer rapid, non-invasive measurement of particulate matter. They are essential in environmental monitoring, cleanrooms, and air quality assessment due to their accuracy and speed.
A: No, optical polarimeters focus on light polarization, not particle characteristics. For particle analysis, optical particle sensors or dedicated particle counter sensors are required.