Title: Traceability in Chemical Measurement
1Traceability in Chemical Measurement
Why Traceability?
- Comparable results are needed in order to avoid
duplicating measurements which cost time and
money.
Comparable results can only be achieved by
anchoring them to a common base.
2ELEMENTS OF TRACEABILITY
- an unbroken chain of comparisons going back to a
standard acceptable to the parties, usually a
national or international standard
3How is traceability of results best achieved?
- stated and/or internationally agreed suitable
references
- an uncertainty statement for the measurement
whose key role is to enable to judge the "fitness
for purpose" of a result - Guide to the Expression of Uncertainty in
Measurement, ISBN 92-67-10188-9, International
Organization for Standardization, Genève 1993 (
draft updates, respectively)
4Technical Elements of Traceability
- A laboratory finds itself typically at the end of
the traceability chain
- it must be able to rely on all the references
necessary in the measurement process, as well as
on method validation
- values of all references are themselves traceable
to stated references and are accompanied by a
reliable uncertainty statement.
5Technical Elements of Traceability
- Determination of amount of substance often
requires measurements of different properties,
e.g.
- sample mass, on a balance compared to a mass
reference
- analyte identity by comparison to a reference
- analyte quantitation by comparison to a different
reference
Each property of the result should be traceable,
and each may contribute uncertainty to the
reported result.
6Traceability of Values Carried by RM
- traceability supplied from outside the laboratory
is the traceability of values carried by
references, especially by certified reference
materials
- producers of reference materials must be aware
that the values they supply are invariably an
indispensable link in the traceability chain.
Reference ILAC
7LEVELS IN THE CALIBRATION HIERARCHY
- International
- The Bureau International des Poids et Mesures
(BIPM) is in charge with coordinating the
development and maintenance of primary standards
and organizes intercomparisons on the highest
level.
- National Metrology Institutes
- National Metrology Institutes are the highest
authorities in metrology, maintaining national
standards, ensuring that the primary standards
themselves are internationally comparable.
8TERMINOLOGY IN THE HIERARCHY OF STANDARDS
- Primary standard
- A standard that is designated or widely
acknowledged as having the highest metrological
qualities
- International standard
- A standard recognized by an international
agreement to serve internationally as the basis
for assigning values to other standards
9TERMINOLOGY IN THE HIERARCHY OF STANDARDS
- National standard
- A standard recognized by a national decision to
serve as the basis for assigning values to other
standards
- Reference standard
- A standard, generally having the highest
metrological quality available at a given
location or in a given organization
10TERMINOLOGY IN THE HIERARCHY OF STANDARDS
- Transfer standard
- A standard used as an intermediary to compare
standards.
- Travelling standard
- A standard, sometimes of special construction,
intended for transport between different
locations.
- Working standard
- Standard calibrated against a reference standard
and used routinely to calibrate or check material
or measuring instruments.
11Calibration hierarchy