The document discusses measurement uncertainty and inter-laboratory comparisons. It defines key terms like metrology, traceability, accuracy, precision, random and systematic errors. Metrology is the science of measurement and embraces experimental and theoretical determinations at any level of uncertainty. The International System of Units (SI) provides standardized units for measurements. Traceability ensures measurement results can be linked to international standards through an unbroken chain of comparisons. Random errors are due to chance and average out over many measurements, while systematic errors remain constant or change in a known way.
2. "As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality,
they are not certain;
and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to
reality.”
Albert Einstein (1879 – 1955)
3. METROLOGY: THE SCIENCE OF
MEASUREMENTS
Metrology (from Greek 'metron' (measure), and
'logos' (study of)) is the science of measurement.
Metrology embraces Both experiment and
theoretical determinations at any level of
uncertainty in any field of Science and
Technology.
4. METROLOGY
All pervasive nature of measurements
Most people do not realize the important role played by
metrology and associated institutions in our daily life
Classification:
- industrial metrology
- scientific metrology
- Legal metrology
6. Globally operating metrology and testing
system
Uniform system of harmonized leg regulation: WTO/OIML
Uniform system of harmonized standards: ISO/IEC
Worldwide recognition of traceability measurement results
on the basis of SI : CIPM/BIPM
Harmonization of requirements concern in competence of
test labs and certification bodies: ILAC/IAF
7. Hierarchy of International Metrology
Organization
Treaty of meter
General Conference on Weights and Measures (CGPM)
International Committee for
Weights and Measures (CIPM)
International Bureau of Weights
and Measures (BIPM)
Consultative
Committees
10. Measurement related issued
Extensively in demand but often go unnoticed
Effect human lives, as common citizens and consumers ,
in many ways as:
- Trade and consumer protection
- Safety and health care
- Environmental protection
- Law and order
11. It is a qualitative concept.
Some Definitions
Value that is perfectly consistent with the definition of a given
specific quantity.
Value of a measured characteristics that would be obtained by an
ideal and perfect measurement system
Perfect measurement system do not exist hence true value by
nature is indeterminate.
True Value
12. Accuracy
Again, since the TRUE value is unknown, neither is
the maximum deviation. The accuracy is only an
estimate of the worst error.
i
x
x
max
of
estimate
accuracy
The accuracy is a measure (or an estimate) of the
maximum deviation of measured values, xi, from
the TRUE value, x:
Usually expressed as a %-age, e.g. “accurate to 5%”
13. Precision
There is no true value here.
Precision is a characteristic of our measurement.
In everyday language: “accuracy” ≡ “precision”. In error
analysis: “accuracy” ≠ “precision”
i
x
x
max
of
estimate
precision
The precision is a measure (or an estimate) of the
consistency (or repeatability).
Thus it is the maximum deviation of a reading
(measurement), xi, from its mean value, x:
15. Accuracy & Precision: Summary
In other words,
Accuracy means CORRECTNESS of
Measurements
Precision means CONSISTENCY of
measurements
16. Closeness of agreement between the results of successive
measurements of the same measurand carried out under same
(repeatability) conditions of measurement.
Repeatability
Reproducibility
Closeness of agreement between the results of the
measurements of the same measurand carried out under
changed conditions of measurement.
17. - principle of measurement
- method of measurement
- observer (operator)
- measuring instrument
- reference standard
- location
- conditions of use
- time
The conditions include
ISO 5725-3:1994 describes four factors most likely to influence the precision of
measurement method. These are:
Time: time interval between successive measurements
Calibration: equipment is or is not calibrated between successive measurment.
Operator: same or different operators carry out successive measurements
Equipment: same equipment (or same or different batches of reagents) is used
18. Calibration
Calibration is the act of checking or adjusting
(by comparison with a standard) the accuracy
of a measuring instrument
19. SI Units
The International System of Units (abbreviated SI
from the French Le Système international d'unités) is
the modern form of the metric system. It is the
world's most widely used system of units, both in
everyday commerce and in science.
The SI was developed in 1960 from the old metre-
kilogram-second (mks) system
20. The foundation of modern metrology is the International
System of Units (SI), which is used internationally to
define the fundamental units of measurement. These are
used to derive other units and are used to define other
measurement units, such as may be used locally.
The SI consists of 7 base and number of derived units:
21. Base units
Name Symbol Quantity
meter m length
kilogram kg mass
second s time
ampere A electric current
kelvin K thermodynamic temperature
mole mol amount of substance
Candela cd luminous intensity
22. Derived Units
Parameter SI Unit Abbreviation Definition
Frequency hertz Hz 1/s
Force newton N kg*m/s²
Pressure pascal Pa N/m²
Work or Energy joule J N*m
Power watt W J/s
23. Parameter SI Unit Abbreviation Definition
Electric
Resistance
ohm ohm V/A
Quantity of
Charge
coulomb C A*s
Electric
Capacitance
farad F C/V
Conductance siemens S A/V
Electric Potential volt V W/A
24. Parameter SI Unit Abbreviation Definition
Magnetic Flux weber Wb V*s
Magnetic Flux
Density
tesla T Wb/²
Inductance henry H Wb/A
Celsius
Temperature
degree °C K
Luminous Flux lumen lm cd*sr
26. Realization in Indian scenario
The realization of all these units is done by
calibration of the measuring instruments,
maintained through the unbroken chain of
measurements from the base standard to main the
traceability
In India, NPL is custodian of all standards (Except
Radiation), BARC is custodian of Radiation related
standards.
27. Treaceability
The property of the result of a measurement or
the value of a standard whereby it can be
related to stated references, usually national
or international standards, through an
unbroken chain of comparisons all having
stated uncertainties.
28. How traceability is established?
International standard (length), at GENEVA
National Standard (at NPL) Interferometer at
10-9m at say +/- 10ppm
level
Echelon 2 Laboratory (ERTL) length standard (slip
gauge of grade 00 at acc. +/- 200
ppm level
Other Lab (NABL Accredited) slip gauge of grade 0 at
acc +/- 1000 ppm
30. Transfer of length std.
The iodine stabilized HeNe
laser operating at 633 nm is
the most common because
it is convenient to operate,
accurate to
2.5 parts in 1011, and is
used to calibrate
commercial displacement
measuring interferometer
systems
33. Measurement Error : Result of measurement minus
the true value of measurand.
Random error : Result of measurement minus
mean result of large number of repeat
measurements.
Systematic error : Mean of large number of repeat
measurements of same measurand minus true
value of measurand.
More Definitions
34. Error
The error is the difference between a TRUE value, x,
and a MEASURED value, xi:
There is no error-free measurement.
The significance of a measurement cannot be
judged unless the associate error has been reliably
estimated.
Since the true value, x, is unknown, then so is E.
Always.
i
x
x
E
35. Two types of errors
Random error
Always present in every physical measurement
It can be made smaller
Better apparatus
Better procedure
More uniform or controlled conditions
Estimation of the random error is the obligation of the
experimenter
Propagation of random errors in calculated quantities
gives the error in the result based on measurements
Determines the precision of any measurement
36. Two types of errors
Systematic error
May be present in every physical measurement
It can be made smaller
Better calibration (e.g., time, distance, voltage, etc.)
Use instruments to minimize systematic error (e.g., ruler
alignment)
More uniform or controlled conditions (e.g., avoid
systematic changes in temperature, light intensity, air
currents, etc.)
Discovery and estimation of a systematic error is the
obligation of the experimenter
Systematic errors should be removed or minimized if at
all possible. They should always be reported - even
those that are suspect (e.g., calibration of time, distance;
calibration stability)
Determines the accuracy of any measurement
37. Random error
For instance, if you conduct a measurement many thousand
times (using different instruments and/or observers and/or
samples) you would expect to have random errors affecting
your measurement in either direction roughly the same
number of times
Electrical noise in a circuit generally produces a voltage error
that may be positive or negative by a small amount.
By counting the total number of pennies in a large container,
one may occasionally pick up two and only count one (or vice
versa).
A random error is just that – random !
38. Random errors
Random errors and the standard deviation
All measurements have random error.
Consider an example.
Measure the range of a projectile shot from a gun
Use this to calculate the velocity when the
projectile left the gun
Make one measurement (202.4 cm) ; what is the
error?
Meter stick will give ~3 mm error.
How might we find out whether this is
reasonable?
Make repeated measurements of the range --
47. Random errors
10000 measurements
Distribution of distance measurements for projectile
0.0000
50.0000
100.0000
150.0000
200.0000
250.0000
300.0000
350.0000
400.0000
450.0000
500.0000
550.0000
600.0000
197.0 198.0 199.0 200.0 201.0 202.0 203.0 204.0 205.0 206.0 207.0 208.0 209.0 210.0 211.0
Distance (cm)
Frequency
±1
Mean
±2s ; 95%
Standard
deviation
48. Random errors
Interpretation
If you repeat this measurement many times (e.g., 100,
10,000) you would find that
68.3% of all these measurements will be within ± 1 g,
and,
95% of all these measurements will be within ± 2 g
of your quoted (measured) value, g.
49. The probability that a normal random variable takes a value
within one standard deviation of its mean is about 68%.
The 68 – 95 – 99.7 Rule
50. The probability that a normal random variable takes a value
within two standard deviations of its mean is about 95%.
The 68 – 95 – 99.7 Rule
51. The probability that a normal random variable takes a value
within three standard deviations of its mean is about 99.7%.
The 68 – 95 – 99.7 Rule
52. Statistics
Now throw 100 coins…
0
0.01
0.02
0.03
0.04
0.05
0.06
0.07
0.08
0.09
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Number of Heads
Probability
of
Occurence
We have an average
= 50
And a standard
deviation = 5
And the familiar
bell-shaped
distribution.
The
Gaussian
curve fits
exactly.
53. Confidence
Now throw 100 coins…
0
0.01
0.02
0.03
0.04
0.05
0.06
0.07
0.08
0.09
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Number of Heads
Probability
of
Occurence
Since the total
probability must =1,
the standard
deviation marks off
certain
probabilities.
54. 0
0.01
0.02
0.03
0.04
0.05
0.06
0.07
0.08
0.09
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Number of Heads
Probability
of
Occurence
Confidence
Now throw 100 coins…
Since the total
probability must =1,
the standard
deviation marks off
certain
probabilities.
About 68% of
all results lie
within 1
standard
deviation.
“I am 68% confident that a
new throw will give
between 45 and 55 heads.”
55. 0
0.01
0.02
0.03
0.04
0.05
0.06
0.07
0.08
0.09
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Number of Heads
Probability
of
OccurenceConfidence
Now throw 100 coins…
Since the total
probability must =1,
the standard
deviation marks off
certain
probabilities.
About 95% of
all results lie
within 2
standard
deviations.
“I am 95% confident that a
new throw will give
between 40 and 60 heads.”
56. Systematic error
Human components of measurement
systems are often responsible for
systematic errors.
A systematic error is one that is consistent.
That is, it happens systematically.
57. Example of systematic errors
If I drop a ball from a given height and I measure
the time it takes to hit the ground.
Even if I repeat the measurement several time, I
may consistently have a tendency to wait until I
see the ball bounce before I stop the watch
As a result, my timing measurements might be
systematically too long
58. No measurement or test is perfect and the
imperfections give rise to error of
measurement in the result
So, apply corrections for known or suspected
components of error
59. There still remains some doubt, or
uncertainty, about how well the result of
measurement represents the true value of
the quantity being measured.
The error is the main contributor to the
uncertainty
60. What is the difference between
error and uncertainty ?
61. ERROR V/S UNCERTAINTY
Error is a single
value
Value of known
error can be
applied as a
correction to a
result
Uncertainty
takes the form
of a range
The value of
uncertainty
cannot be used
to correct a
result
62. Why measurement uncertainty?
Reasons of variability: cumulative effect of
variations in number of factors that influence the
measurements, e.g., equipment, method,
competence of persons, environment etc.
Repeat measurement results of the same measurand
under same conditions of measurement are
generally not the same
how wrong or how right?
There is a certain amount of variability among
repeat measurements results
63. Measurement Uncertainty in
ISO/IEC 17025
Cl 5.4.6: Labs shall have and apply a procedure to
estimate the uncertainty of measurement for all
calibrations and types of calibrations.
Testing laboratories shall have and shall apply
procedures for estimating uncertainty of
measurements
Cl 5.10.3: Calibration certificate shall include a
statement of uncertainty of measurement and / or
statement of compliance with an identified
metrological specification
Test reports shall include a statement on the
estimated uncertainty of measurement where
applicable
64. Measurement Uncertainty in ISO
9001:2008
Cl 7.6: Measurement provide evidence of conformity of
products to specified requirements
- Specified requirements are related to tolerance of
product characteristics
- Two factors to be considered:
Tolerance of product characteristics
variability / uncer. of measurement system
- Management to ensure: Uncertainty is known and
should be in accordance with measurement
procedures
65. What is Uncertainty?
Defined in simple terms, the uncertainty of
a result of a measurand is the lack of
exact knowledge of the value of
measurand or the doubt about the
validity of the result of measurement.
66. Formal definition (as per ISO guide, GUM):
“Parameter, associated with the result of a
measurement, that characterizes the
disper-sion of the values that could be
attributed to the measurand.”
This parameter may be, e.g., standard
deviation or the half width of an interval
having a stated level of confidence.
68. uncertainty of a result is a quantitative
indication of its quality
allows comparison of results while
interpreting data
It can be a key part of method validation
for improvement of procedures.
to allow valid measurements and results to
be obtained
69. Expression of uncertainty
If the probability characterized by the measurement
result y and its standard uncertainty u(y) is
approximately normal (gaussian), and u(y) is a
reliable estimate of the standard deviation of y.
We can say that Y is greater than or equal to y-u(y),
and is less than or equal to y+ u(y), which is
commonly written as
Y= y± u(y).