Gas-phase synthesis is a promising method for scalable production of high-quality free-standing few-layer graphene (FLG) particles. This study assesses the feasibility of elastic light scattering in characterizing particle morphology and distinguishing FLG from soot-like particles that may also be produced concurrently during gas-phase synthesis. FLG particle morphology is modeled based on tomographic electron microscopy images of FLG particles produced within a plasma reactor, whereas synthetic soot particles are generated via a cluster–cluster aggregation algorithm based on morphological parameters typical of flame soot. Light scattering properties of ensembles of synthetic FLG and soot particles are simulated via the discrete dipole approximation (DDA) and the multi-sphere T-matrix method, respectively. Angle-resolved scattering properties of ensembles of FLG and soot particles are analyzed to evaluate the feasibility of scattering-based diagnostics and identify potential measurement configurations for characterizing particle morphology. Overall, certain scattering properties, especially the depolarization ratio, are observed to be sensitive to the distinctive morphological aspects of FLG and soot, which highlights the promise of light scattering-based diagnostics for characterizing morphology during gas-phase synthesis of FLG.
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