Hi @frankderuyck !
I will repeat some of the options I was discussing with you outside of the JMP Community and add some details, so that it may start a discussion with other members and provide a discussion starter as well.
There may be several options with various difficulties and compromise for this situation :
- You can use a categorical factor with levels High and Low, and specify in your model the interaction between concentration and emulgator type factors to take into consideration the difference in concentration numerical levels.
- If you have a common concentration range for several emulgators, you can create one numerical continuous factor "concentration" and use the "disallowed combinations" to specify the available ranges for each emulgator, as well as specifying the interaction "concentration*emulgator type".
- Finally (but I'm not entirely sure of the viability of this option), you can also keep one continuous factor concentration as a coded factor with two level (-1 and 1), and use different min and max concentrations values for each emulgators. It's like having a relative numerical scale for the concentration factors, where level min would be equivalent to x%, and level max would be equivalent to 100%. You would also have to include in the model the interaction terms between concentration and emulgator type factors. I'm not sure about this last option, but looking at a "relative" scale depending on the emulgator this may work.
EDIT: Following our discussion and with the paper you send me from Peter Goos about nested factors in DoE (link: https://lirias.kuleuven.be/retrieve/560302), it seems the example 4.2 looks similar to what you intend to do. It looks like the use of split-plot designs might help in keeping the link and hierarchy between the choice of emulgator type and its related concentration. Emulgator type would be a hard to change factor, and the concentration an easy to change factor.
I hope this will bring other members to jump in the conversation and provide feedbacks, guidance and advices.
All the best Frank,
Victor GUILLER
L'Oréal Data & Analytics
"It is not unusual for a well-designed experiment to analyze itself" (Box, Hunter and Hunter)