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Sampling and metrology
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">Kaj?HeydornEmail author  Kim?Esbensen
Institution:(1) Department of Chemistry, Technical University of Denmark, Kgs. Lyngby, 2800, Denmark;(2) Applied Chemometrics and Sampling Group, Aalborg University, Esbjerg, 6700, Denmark
Abstract:The result of a measurement refers in principle only to the amount of substance actually contributing to the analytical signal. However, an appropriate definition of the measurand must include a specification of the system for which the result of the measurement should apply. All systems being inherently heterogeneous, representativity assumes importance for the metrological quality of a measurement, and the process needed to ascertain representativity is sampling. The contribution from this characteristic must be included when expressing the uncertainty of the reported value of the measurand. Representative sampling of systems that are infinite or non-uniform was developed by Pierre Gy in his Theory of Sampling. Finite systems can achieve uniformity by mechanical treatment and mixing; the heterogeneity of these systems can be characterized by a sampling constant, expressed in units of weight, for each particular species being determined. Examples of the contribution of sampling to the uncertainty of analytical results are discussed for some biological materials. Presented at the 2nd International Conference on Metrology – Trends and Applications in Calibration and Testing Laboratories, November 4–6, 2003, Eilat, Israel.
Keywords:Sampling constant  Uniformity  Heterogeneity  Sampling uncertainty
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