thumb|A uniform (monodisperse) collectionthumb|A non-uniform (polydisperse) collection
thumb|A uniform (monodisperse) collectionthumb|A non-uniform (polydisperse) collection
In chemistry, the dispersity is a measure of the heterogeneity of sizes of molecules or particles in a mixture. A collection of objects is called uniform if the objects have the same size, shape, or mass. A sample of objects that have an inconsistent size, shape and mass distribution is called non-uniform. The objects can be in any form of chemical dispersion, such as particles in a colloid, droplets in a cloud, crystals in a rock, or polymer macromolecules in a solution or a solid polymer mass. Polymers can be described by molecular mass distribution; a population of particles can be described by size, surface area, and/or mass distribution; and thin films can be described by film thickness distribution.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).