Measure loose and compacted powder structure with confidence. Track density, porosity, flow, and compressibility indicators. Use smart inputs, instant summaries, exports, examples, and charts.
Use the responsive three, two, and one column input layout below.
These sample rows show how typical laboratory inputs translate into packing and flow indicators.
| Material | Mass | Loose Volume | Tapped Volume | True Density | Bulk Density | Tapped Density | Carr Index | Hausner Ratio |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alumina Powder | 250 g | 500 cm³ | 455 cm³ | 3.95 g/cm³ | 0.5000 g/cm³ | 0.5495 g/cm³ | 9.01% | 1.0990 |
| Steel Powder | 500 g | 735 cm³ | 650 cm³ | 7.80 g/cm³ | 0.6803 g/cm³ | 0.7692 g/cm³ | 11.56% | 1.1307 |
| Silica Blend | 300 g | 620 cm³ | 560 cm³ | 2.20 g/cm³ | 0.4839 g/cm³ | 0.5357 g/cm³ | 9.67% | 1.1071 |
ρbulk = m / Vbulk
Mass divided by the loose, untapped powder volume.
ρtapped = m / Vtapped
Mass divided by the final compacted volume after tapping.
φ = ρ / ρtrue
The fraction of the bed volume occupied by solid material.
ε = 1 - φ
Porosity represents the void space inside the powder bed.
CI = ((ρtapped - ρbulk) / ρtapped) × 100
Higher values usually indicate greater compressibility and weaker flow.
HR = ρtapped / ρbulk
A quick engineering indicator for powder flow behavior.
VR = ((Vbulk - Vtapped) / Vbulk) × 100
Shows the percent bed shrinkage created by tapping.
Enter the powder mass and choose the correct mass unit.
Add the loose bulk volume measured before any tapping.
Enter the tapped volume recorded after the selected tapping count.
Provide the material’s true density to compute packing fraction and porosity.
Submit the form to see results above the form, export data, and review the graph.
It describes how much powder mass occupies a measured bed volume. Loose packing uses the initial bed, while tapped packing uses the compacted bed after mechanical settling.
Tapping rearranges particles, reduces voids, and lets the powder settle into a denser structure. That lowers bed volume and raises tapped density.
Both compare loose and compacted states. Carr Index is a percentage-based compressibility measure, while Hausner Ratio is a direct density ratio used for quick flow screening.
Yes. The calculator converts supported mass, volume, and density units internally before performing all engineering calculations.
True density lets the calculator estimate packing fraction, porosity, and void ratio. Without it, you can compare bulk and tapped density, but not internal bed void structure.
That usually signals inconsistent input data, incorrect units, or measurement errors. Recheck the solid density, mass, and volume values before using the result for design work.
It supports analysis and reporting, but it does not replace controlled laboratory procedures, certified equipment, or standard-specific acceptance requirements.
Lower Carr Index and lower Hausner Ratio usually indicate better flow. Small differences between loose and tapped density often suggest lower compressibility and more stable handling behavior.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.