"1. "particle target amount". Not sure what this is? Is it particle "density"? Are you measuring the distribution of particle sizes? How much does this vary in production? How "good" is the measurement system? Is there more variation within a "batch" (over the course of depleting a reservoir) or batch-to-batch? Is this consistent? How much of a change in this metric will impact product performance (or yields).
This is important to know prior to experimentation."
It's particles per volume, a concentration or density that we measure. Shifting particle size distributions are not so much of a concern for us. If particles "break" they won't be recognized by the counting device, same goes for agglomeration. The measurement device has much higher precision and accuracy than the particle transfer so let's consider it "good".
We don't know about the depletion caused (?) variation within a block. Unsuitable particle agitation or transfer parameters could result in accumulation of particles in the reservoir. Variation between blocks should be minimal as all blocks are fed from the same starting particle suspension that can be maintained as "ideal" conditions
The acceptance corridor for "good" particle density is about 2xSD and we would aim for 1xSD prediction variance.
"2. "particle CV". My guess is this is the coefficient of variation of the particle size distribution. How is this measured? Again, has the measurement system been studied? Also how much of a change in this will impact product performance?"
Coefficient of variation of particle density (concentration), 6 transfer replicates per run. To make it a bit more complicated the "replicates" are taken from different positions within the reservoir. Therefore the CV will tell us about homogeneity of particle dispersion.
Target is to minimize CV.
"3. "yield of the process that uses the solution" I'm not a fan of yields as a measure (particularly for causal structure understanding) as it can be too aggregate to get precise information about the physical/chemical mechanisms at work, but I understand it is used by management and ultimately you want to increase yield (this might be at a higher level in the hierarchy of metrics). Are the production yields consistent now? How much do yields vary? Have you listed all of your hypotheses about what might affect yields? The consistency of particle size/distribution being one of those. Of course, be aware you could greatly improve the consistency of your solution and have yields drop because of some other factor effects."
Yield or product concentration is rather a backup response, we are at risk of finding good transfer settings (at target concentration, minimal CV) that are yet unfavorable for the subsequent production step. Unfortunately we have a pretty long production process that simply cannot be fully covered in a single design.
Therefore we already separated the experiments based on minimal anticipated interaction between factors.
Thanks for the tip about the fixed block effect. But if I already have fill height in the model as hard to change resulting in the appropriate blocking why would I need to do that?