2 research outputs found
Determination of uncertainty in analytical measurements from collaborative study results on the analysis of a phenoxymethylpenicillin sample
The correct interpretation of a measurement result requires knowledge about its uncertainty. Depending on the conditions under which the analyst is operating, different operational definitions of uncertainty have been proposed. They include: within-laboratory uncertainty, reproducibility uncertainty, bias-included uncertainty and absolute uncertainty. Here we consider the evaluation of the reproducibility uncertainty derived from the results obtained in an inter-laboratory experiment. Nine laboratories participated in an inter-laboratory study for the analysis of phenoxymethylpenicillin. The analyses consisted of a Karl–Fischer water determination, an acid–base titration to assay phenoxymethylpenicillin and a liquid chromatography (LC) method to determine 4-hydroxyphenoxymethylpenicillin and other impurities. The experimental set-up allowed to obtain for each determination s2 r and s2L as estimates of the repeatability variance (σ2 r ) and the between-laboratory variance (σ2L ), respectively. The reproducibility uncertainties for the different assays were then derived from these estimates