Traditional solar sail architectures involve large, thin, reflective membranes stretched across lightweight structural elements, a design that has many well-documented engineering challenges. This paper evaluates an alternative, "fractionated" solar sail in which the sail itself is composed of small discrete particles held in place by superconductive flux-pinning forces. This analysis investigates two candidate particulate solar sail architectures: a particle-cloud sail and an integrated payload sail. It emphasizes design aspects of the particles, the macroscopic structure, deployment methods, possible control mechanisms, and performance metrics. The sail loading factor for each design is found to be 50 g m -2 and 90 g m -2 for the particle cloud sail and integrated payload sail respectively. The examination concludes with a discussion of major challenges and potential applications for each design.