Convert between nanoparticle size units, calculate surface area, volume, concentration, and properties. Supports nm, Å, μm conversions with surface-to-volume ratio analysis.
The Nanoparticle Unit Converter calculates key properties of spherical nanoparticles from their diameter: volume, surface area, surface-to-volume ratio, specific surface area, number concentration, and mass concentration. It also converts between nanometers, angstroms, micrometers, and other common nanoscale units. That gives you one place to relate particle size, concentration, and surface-driven behavior without bouncing between separate formulas.
Nanoparticles behave differently from bulk materials because their surface area rises much faster than their volume as size shrinks. A small change in diameter can dramatically change catalytic behavior, dispersion stability, optical response, and dose calculations.
Enter the particle diameter, density, and either a mass or number concentration to compare how particle size affects the rest of the system. That makes the page useful both as a quick unit converter and as a compact size-property reference. It is especially handy when you need to translate between lab-scale measurements and the physical properties that drive reactivity.
It gives you the size conversions and particle-property estimates that usually get scattered across separate formulas, lab notes, and spreadsheets. That is especially useful when you need to sanity-check concentration, SSA, or surface-area changes after a diameter adjustment. It also helps keep nanoscale unit conversions tied to the physical property changes that matter in the lab, which makes quick checks faster and less error-prone.
Volume: V = (4/3)π(d/2)³. Surface Area: A = πd². Surface/Volume: S/V = 6/d. Specific Surface Area: SSA = 6/(ρd). Number concentration: N = C_mass / (ρV). Surface atoms fraction ≈ 4(r_atom/r_particle).
Result: V = 523.6 nm³, A = 314.2 nm², SSA = 31.1 m²/g
A 10 nm gold nanoparticle (ρ = 19.3 g/cm³): V = 4/3 × π × 5³ = 523.6 nm³. A = π × 10² = 314.2 nm². SSA = 6/(19.3 × 10⁻⁶ × 10×10⁻⁹) = 31.1 m²/g. At 0.05 mg/mL: ~4.95 × 10¹² particles/mL.
The nanometer scale bridges molecules and bulk materials. At 1-2 nm, nanoparticles contain only tens to hundreds of atoms and behave more like molecules (discrete energy levels, no defined crystal structure). At 10-100 nm, they have bulk-like interiors but surface-dominated properties. Above 100 nm, they approach bulk behavior.
For reference: a water molecule is ~0.28 nm; DNA helix diameter is 2.5 nm; a ribosome is ~25 nm; a typical virus is 20-300 nm; a human cell is ~10,000 nm (10 μm). Understanding these scales is essential for designing nanoparticle-based therapies, sensors, and materials.
The key equation S/V = 6/d (for spheres) explains why nanoparticles are so reactive. Halving the diameter doubles the surface-to-volume ratio. Going from 100 nm to 1 nm increases S/V by 100×. Since chemical reactions happen at surfaces, this explains the dramatic catalytic enhancement of nanoparticles.
This principle drives applications in catalysis (Pt nanoparticles in fuel cells), energy storage (nanoscale electrode materials), drug delivery (surface-functionalized carriers), and sensors (high-surface-area detection platforms).
Nanoparticle size can be measured by multiple techniques, each reporting a different "size." TEM gives physical diameter. DLS gives hydrodynamic diameter (larger, includes solvation shell). SAXS gives electron density profile. BET measures specific surface area (which can be converted to equivalent sphere diameter). XRD gives crystallite size. Always compare like with like.
Their extremely high surface-to-volume ratio. A 1 nm particle has S/V = 6 nm⁻¹; a 100 nm particle has 0.06 nm⁻¹. This 100× difference means nanoscale materials are far more reactive, have different optical properties (quantum effects), and different mechanical behavior than bulk materials.
SSA is the total surface area per unit mass, typically in m²/g. It's measured experimentally by BET gas adsorption. For spherical nanoparticles: SSA = 6/(ρd). Smaller particles and lower-density materials have higher SSA. 5 nm silica has SSA ≈ 545 m²/g.
Below ~10 nm: quantum confinement affects electronic/optical properties (quantum dots). ~1-5 nm: most atoms are surface atoms, dramatically changing reactivity. ~10-100 nm: high surface area but bulk-like interior. The melting point of gold drops from 1064°C (bulk) to ~300°C at 2 nm.
The percentage of a particle's atoms located on the surface. For a 2 nm gold nanoparticle (~250 atoms), about 60% are surface atoms. At 20 nm (~250,000 atoms), only about 6% are on the surface. This determines catalytic activity and chemical stability.
Mass concentration: mg/mL or μg/mL. Number concentration: particles/mL. Molar concentration: M (moles/L). OD (optical density) for colored nanoparticles. For gold nanoparticles, 1 OD of 15 nm AuNP ≈ 2.4 × 10¹² particles/mL.
1 nm = 10 Å (angstroms). 1 μm = 1000 nm. 1 nm = 10⁻⁹ m. Protein dimensions are typically 2-10 nm, DNA diameter is about 2.5 nm, and many atoms are roughly 0.1-0.3 nm (1-3 Å) across.