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BSI PD ISO GUIDE 35:2017

$215.11

Reference materials. Guidance for characterization and assessment of homogeneity and stability

Published By Publication Date Number of Pages
BSI 2017 116
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This document explains concepts and provides approaches to the following aspects of the production of reference materials:

  • the assessment of homogeneity;

  • the assessment of stability and the management of the risks associated with possible stability issues related to the properties of interest;

  • the characterization and value assignment of properties of a reference material;

  • the evaluation of uncertainty for certified values;

  • the establishment of the metrological traceability of certified property values.

The guidance given supports the implementation of ISO 17034 . Other approaches may also be used as long as the requirements of ISO 17034 are fulfilled.

Brief guidance on the need for commutability assessment (6.11) is given in this document, but no technical details are provided. A brief introduction for the characterization of qualitative properties (9.6 to 9.10) is provided together with brief guidance on sampling such materials for homogeneity tests (Clause 7). However, statistical methods for the assessment of the homogeneity and stability of reference materials for qualitative properties are not covered. This document is also not applicable to multivariate quantities, such as spectral data.

PDF Catalog

PDF Pages PDF Title
2 National foreword
8 Foreword
9 Introduction
11 1 Scope
2 Normative references
3 Terms and definitions
13 4 Symbols
14 5 Conventions
15 6 An overview of reference material production
6.1 General
6.2 Summary of project design
16 6.3 Acquisition of starting material
17 6.4 Feasibility studies
6.5 Reference material processing
6.6 Homogeneity assessment
6.7 Stability assessment
6.8 Choice of measurement procedures
18 6.9 Metrological traceability
6.10 Characterization and uncertainty evaluation
6.11 Commutability assessment
6.12 Transport issues
19 6.13 Value assignment
6.14 Stability monitoring
6.15 Reference materials produced in repeated batches
7 Assessment of homogeneity
7.1 Preamble
20 7.2 Need for an experimental homogeneity study
21 7.3 Properties to be studied
7.4 Statistically valid sampling schemes
7.4.1 Minimum number of units for a homogeneity study
23 7.4.2 Use of statistical power analysis
7.4.3 Sampling strategy for a homogeneity study
24 7.5 Choice and conduct of the measurement procedure for a homogeneity study
7.5.1 Choice of measurement procedure
7.5.2 Conduct of measurements for homogeneity studies
26 7.6 Homogeneity study designs
7.6.1 Objective of a homogeneity study
27 7.6.2 The basic homogeneity study design – measurement in a single run
28 7.6.3 Randomized block design
7.6.4 Balanced nested design
29 7.6.5 Alternative strategies
7.7 Evaluating a homogeneity study
7.7.1 Initial inspection for measurement trends and outliers
30 7.7.2 Inspection for processing trends
7.7.3 Evaluation of the between-unit term – basic design
31 7.7.4 Evaluation of the between-unit term – randomized block design
7.7.5 Evaluation of the between-unit term – balanced nested design
32 7.7.6 Other homogeneity designs and alternative estimation methods
7.8 Insufficient repeatability of the measurement procedure
33 7.9 Within-unit homogeneity
7.9.1 Assessing the need for within-unit homogeneity study
7.9.2 Testing for significant within-unit heterogeneity
35 7.9.3 Assessing minimum sample size
36 7.10 Check for sufficient homogeneity
7.11 Uncertainty evaluation from homogeneity studies
8 Assessment and monitoring of stability
8.1 Preamble
38 8.2 Assessment of stability
8.2.1 Requirement for stability assessment
8.2.2 Types of (in)stability
8.2.3 General methods for assessment of stability
39 8.2.4 Need for experimental study of stability
8.3 Classification of stability studies
8.3.1 General
40 8.3.2 Classification according to conditions of measurement
8.3.3 Classification according to stability study duration and conditions
41 8.3.4 Classification by study objective
42 8.3.5 Designs for different storage and treatment conditions
8.4 General requirements for effective stability studies
8.4.1 Overview of requirements
8.4.2 Selection of units
43 8.4.3 Suitable measurement procedure(s) for stability studies
8.4.4 Appropriate experimental design
44 8.5 Evaluation of stability study results
8.5.1 General considerations for stability study data treatment
45 8.5.2 The basic stability study: multiple points in time at a single storage condition
46 8.5.3 Isochronous designs
48 8.5.4 Accelerated stability studies with multiple exposure conditions
51 8.5.5 Additional sources of random variation in stability studies
52 8.6 Action on finding of a significant trend in a stability study
8.7 Uncertainty evaluation from stability studies
8.7.1 General considerations for uncertainty evaluation from stability studies
53 8.7.2 Sources of uncertainty in predicted change over time
8.7.3 Estimation of stability uncertainties in the absence of significant trends
54 8.7.4 Evaluation of stability uncertainties in the case of a known significant trend
8.8 Estimation of storage lifetime (“shelf life”) from a stability study
8.9 Instructions for use related to management of stability
55 8.10 Stability monitoring
8.10.1 Requirements for monitoring
8.10.2 Choice of initial monitoring point and monitoring interval(s)
57 8.10.3 Experimental approaches and evaluation for stability monitoring
58 9 Characterization of the material
9.1 Preamble
59 9.2 Establishing metrological traceability
9.2.1 Principle
9.2.2 Metrological references
60 9.2.3 Types of measurands
9.2.4 Effect of sample preparation or pre-treatment
61 9.2.5 Verification of traceability
9.3 Characterization using a single reference measurement procedure (as defined in ISO/IEC Guide 99) in a single laboratory
9.3.1 Characterization by a reference measurement procedure without direct comparison with a CRM of the same kind
62 9.3.2 Characterization by value transfer from a reference material to a closely matched candidate reference material using a single measurement procedure performed by one laboratory
63 9.3.3 Selection of RM units for single-laboratory characterization
64 9.3.4 Formulation methods
9.4 Characterization of a non-operationally defined measurand using two or more methods of demonstrable accuracy in one or more competent laboratories
9.4.1 Concept
65 9.4.2 Study design
66 9.4.3 Evaluation
67 9.4.4 Single-laboratory multi-method studies
68 9.5 Characterization of an operationally defined measurand using a network of competent laboratories
9.5.1 Concept
9.5.2 Study setup
9.5.3 Evaluation
9.6 Purity
9.6.1 General
69 9.6.2 Direct determination of purity
9.6.3 Indirect determination of purity
70 9.7 Identity
9.7.1 Materials certified based on provenance
9.7.2 Materials certified for identity based on measurements
72 9.8 Presence/absence
73 9.9 Ordinal scales
9.10 Qualitative properties
9.11 Characterization of non-certified values
10 Evaluating measurement uncertainty
10.1 Basis for evaluating the uncertainty of a property value of a CRM
74 10.2 Basic model for a batch characterization
10.3 Uncertainty sources
75 10.4 Coverage intervals and factors
76 Annex A (informative) Design and evaluation of studies for the characterization of a method-independent measurand using two or more methods of demonstrable accuracy in one or more competent laboratories
87 Annex B (informative) Statistical approaches
99 Annex C (informative) Examples
109 Annex D (informative) Measurement uncertainty evaluation
111 Bibliography
BSI PD ISO GUIDE 35:2017
$215.11