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Homepage>BS Standards>13 ENVIRONMENT. HEALTH PROTECTION. SAFETY>13.060 Water quality>13.060.50 Examination of water for chemical substances>PD CEN/TS 16800:2015 Guideline for the validation of physico-chemical analytical methods
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immediate downloadReleased: 2015-12-31
PD CEN/TS 16800:2015 Guideline for the validation of physico-chemical analytical methods

PD CEN/TS 16800:2015

Guideline for the validation of physico-chemical analytical methods

CURRENCY
348 EUR
Standard number:PD CEN/TS 16800:2015
Pages:52
Released:2015-12-31
ISBN:978 0 580 87777 3
Status:Standard
DESCRIPTION

PD CEN/TS 16800:2015


This standard PD CEN/TS 16800:2015 Guideline for the validation of physico-chemical analytical methods is classified in these ICS categories:
  • 13.060.50 Examination of water for chemical substances

This Technical Specification describes an approach for the validation of physico-chemical analytical methods for environmental matrices.

The guidance in this document addresses two different validation approaches, in increasing order of complexity. These are:

  1. method development and validation at the level of single laboratories (intra-laboratory validation);

  2. method validation at the level of several laboratories (between-laboratory or inter-laboratory validation), with a focus on methods that are sufficiently mature and robust to be applied not only by a few expert laboratories but by laboratories operating at the routine level.

The concept of these two approaches is strictly hierarchical, i.e. a method shall fulfil all criteria of the first level before it can enter the validation protocol of the second level.

This Technical Specification is applicable to the validation of a broad range of quantitative physicochemical analytical methods for the analysis of water (including surface water, groundwater, waste water, and sediment). Analytical methods for other environmental matrices, like soil, sludge, waste, and biota can be validated in the same way. It is intended either for analytical methods aiming at substances that have recently become of interest or for test methods applying recently developed technologies.

The minimal requirements that are indispensable for the characterization of the fitness for purpose of an analytical method are: selectivity, precision, bias and measurement uncertainty. The aim of validation is to prove that these requirements are met.