Dictionary Definition
metrology n : the scientific study of
measurement
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- The science of weights and measures or of measurement.
- A system of weights and measures.
Translations
science of measurement
Extensive Definition
Metrology (from Ancient
Greek 'metron' (measure), and 'logos' (study of)) is the
science of measurement.
Metrology includes all theoretical and practical aspects of
measurement.
Introduction
Metrology is defined by the
International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM) as "the
science of measurement, embracing both experimental and theoretical determinations
at any level of uncertainty in any field of
science and technology." http://www.bipm.org/en/convention/wmd/2004/
Metrology is a very broad field and may be
divided into three subfields:
- Scientific or fundamental metrology concerns the establishment of measurement units, unit systems, the development of new measurement methods, realisation of measurement standards and the transfer of traceability from these standards to users in society.
- Applied or industrial metrology concerns the application of measurement science to manufacturing and other processes and their use in society, ensuring the suitability of measurement instruments, their calibration and quality control of measurements.
- Legal metrology concerns regulatory requirements of measurements and measuring instruments for the protection of health, public safety, the environment, enabling taxation, protection of consumers and fair trade.
A core concept in metrology is (metrological)
traceability,
defined as "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." The level
of traceability establishes the level of comparability of the
measurement: whether the result of a measurement can be compared to
the previous one, a measurement result a year ago, or to the result
of a measurement performed anywhere else in the world.
Traceability is most often obtained by calibration, establishing
the relation between the indication of a measuring instrument and
the value of a measurement standard. These standards are usually
coordinated by national laboratories:
National Institute of Standards and Technology (USA),
National Physical Laboratory, UK, etc.
Tracebility, precision, bias, evaluation of measurement
uncertainty are critical parts of a quality
management system.
Historical development
sync History of measurementMetrology has existed in some form or another
since antiquity. The earliest forms of metrology were simply
arbitrary standards set up by regional or local authorities, often
based on practical measures such as the length of an arm. The
earliest examples of these standardized measures are length, time, and weight. These standards were
established in order to facilitate commerce and record human
activity.
Little progress was made with regard to
proto-metrology until various scientists, chemists, and physicists started making
headway during the Scientific
Revolution. With the advances in the sciences, the comparison
of experiment to theory required a rational system of units, and
something more closely resembling modern metrology began to come
into being. The discovery of atoms, electricity, thermodynamics, and other
fundamental scientific principles could be applied to standards of
measurement, and many inventions made it easier to quantitatively
or qualitatively assess physical properties, using the defined
units of measurement established by science.
Metrology was thus one of the precursors to the
Industrial
Revolution, and was necessary for the implementation of
mass
production, equipment commonality, and assembly
lines.
Modern metrology has its roots in the French
Revolution, with the political motivation to harmonize units
all over France and the
concept of establishing units of measurement based on constants of
nature, and thus making
measurement units available "for all people, for all time". In this
case deriving a unit of length from the dimensions of the Earth, and a unit of
mass from a cube of water. The result was platinum
standards for the meter and the kilogram established as the
basis of the metric system on June 22, 1799. This further led to
the creation of the Système International d'Unités, or the
International System of Units. This system has gained
unprecedented worldwide acceptance as definitions and standards of
modern measurement units. Though not the official system of
units of all nations, the definitions and specifications of
SI are globally
accepted and recognized. The SI is maintained under the auspices of
the Metre
Convention and its institutions, the
General Conference on Weights and Measures, or CGPM, its
executive branch the
International Committee for Weights and Measures, or CIPM, and
its technical institution the
International Bureau of Weights and Measures, or BIPM.
As the authorities on SI, these organizations
establish and promulgate the SI, with the ambition to be able to
service all. This includes introducing new units, such as the
relatively new unit, the mole, to
encompass metrology in chemistry. These units are then established
and maintained through various agencies in each country, and
establish a hierarchy of measurement standards that can be traced
back to the established standard unit, a concept known as
metrological traceability. The U.S. agencies holding this
responsibility is known as the National Institute of Standards and
Technology, or NIST; and the
American National Standards Institute (ANSI).
Industry-specific metrology standards
In addition to standards created by national and
international standards organizations, many large and small
industrial companies also define metrology standards and procedures
to meet their particular needs for technically and economically
competitive manufacturing. These standards and procedures, while
drawing in part upon the national and international standards, also
address the issues of what specific instrument technology will be
used to measure each quantity, how often each quantity will be
measured, and which definition of each quantity will be used as the
basis for accomplishing the process
control that their manufacturing and product specifications
require. Industrial metrology standards include dynamic control
plans, also known as “dimensional control plans”, or “DCPs”, for
their products.
In industrial metrology, several issues beyond
accuracy constrain the usability of metrology methods. These
include 1. The speed with which measurements can be accomplished on
parts or surfaces in the process of manufacturing, which must match
the TAKT
Time of the production line. 2. The completeness with which the
manufactured part can be measured such as described in High-definition
metrology, 3. The ability of the measurement mechanism to
operate reliably in a manufacturing plant environment considering
temperature, vibration, dust, and a host of other potential hostile
factors, 4. The ability of the measurement results, as they are
presented, to be assimilated by the manufacturing operators or
automation in time to effectively control the manufacturing process
variables, and 5. The total financial cost of measuring each
part.
Mechanisms
At the base of metrology is the definition, realisation and dissemination of units of measurement. Physical or chemical properties are quantised by assigning a property value in some multiple of a measurement unit.The basic 'lineage' of measurement standards
are:
- The definition of a unit, based on some physical constant, such as absolute zero, the freezing point of water, etc.; or an agreed-upon arbitrary standard.
- The realisation of the unit by experimental methods and the scaling into multiples and submultiples, by establishment of primary standards. In some cases an approximation is used, when the realisation of the units is less precise than other methods of generating a scale of the quantity in question. This is presently the situation for the electrical units in the SI, where voltage and resistance are defined in terms of the ampere, but are used in practice from realisations based on the Josephson effect and the quantised Hall effect.
- the transfer of traceability from the primary standards to secondary and working standards. This is achieved by calibration.
Theoretically, metrology, as the science of
measurement, attempts to validate the data obtained from test
equipment. Though metrology is the science of measurement, in
practical applications, it is the enforcement,
verification and validation of predefined standards for
precision, accuracy, traceability, and reliability.
- Accuracy is the degree of exactness which the final product corresponds to the measurement standard.
- Preciseness refers to the degree of exactness which a measuring instrument can determine accuracy (actually, inaccuracy).
- Reliability refers to the consistency of accurate results over consecutive measurements.
- Traceability refers to the ongoing validations that the measurement of the final product conforms to the original standard of measurement.
(Fundamentals of Dimensional Metrology, Ted
Busch, Wilkie Bros Foundation, Delmar Publishers, ISBN
0-8273-2127-9)
These standards can vary widely, but
are often mandated by governments, agencies, and treaties such as
the International Organization for Standardization, the Metre
Convention, or the FDA. These agencies promulgate policies and
regulations that standardize industries, countries, and streamline
international trade, products, and measurements. Metrology is, at
its core, an analysis of the uncertainty of individual
measurements, and attempts to validate each measurement made with a
given instrument, and the data obtained from it. The dissemination
of traceability to consumers in society is often performed by
dedicated calibration laboratory with a recognized quality system
in compliance with such standards. National laboratory
accreditation schemes have been established to offer third-party
assessment of such quality systems. A central requirement of these
accreditations is documented traceability to national or
international standards.
Some common standards include:
- ISO 17025:2005 - General Requirements for Calibration Laboratories
- ISO 9000 - Quality Systems Management
- ISO 14000 - Environmental Management
- 21 CFR Part 210/211 - FDA Regulations concerning GMP (Good Maintenance Practices) Quality Systems
- 21 CFR Part 110 - FDA Regulations concerning Food Industry GMP's
See also
References
- Organisation Internationale de Metrologie Legale. (2000), International Vocabulary of Terms in Legal Metrology, [Online] http://www.oiml.org/publications/V/V001-ef00.pdf. (Latest version draft can be downloaded at http://www.ncsli.org/vim/wg2_doc_N318_VIM_3rd_edition_2006-08-01%20(3).pdf)
- Bureau International des Poids et Mesures. (2005), "What is metrology", Copyright BIPM 2004, [Online] http://www.bipm.org/en/bipm/metrology/.
- Sarle, W. (1995), Measurement theory: Frequently asked questions, Copyright 1995 by Warren S. Sarle, Cary, NC, USA [Online] SAS Institute web pages: ftp://ftp.sas.com/pub/neural/measurement.faq
- Bureau International des Poids et Mesures. (2000), The International System of Units (SI), [Online] BIPM web pages: http://www.bipm.fr/enus/3_SI/
- Bureau International des Poids et Mesures. (2000), The Convention of the meter, [Online] BIPM web pages: http://www.bipm.fr/enus/1_Convention/
- Melville, D.J. (2001). Sumerian metrological numeration systems, Mesopotamian Mathematics, [Online] St. Lawrence University web pages, http://it.stlawu.edu/%7Edmelvill/mesomath/sumerian.html
- National Institute of Standards and Technology. (1999), The NIST Reference of Constants, Units, and Uncertainty, [Online] NIST web pages: http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/index.html
- National Institute of Standards and Technology / Sematech. (n.d.). Engineering Statistics Handbook. [Online] NIST web pages: http://www.nist.gov/itl/div898/handbook/
- National Physical Laboratory, UK - National Measurement Laboratory - Metrology related resources including many free PDF downloads including Good Practice Guides: [Online] http://www.npl.co.uk/
- Ken Alder, "The Measure of All Things", Little, Brown 2002. (An historical account on the origin of the metric system, the meridian project).
- Kimothi, S. K., "The Uncertainty of Measurements: Physical and Chemical Metrology: Impact and Analysis", 2002, ISBN 0873895355
External links
- Measurement Uncertainties in Science and Technology, Springer 2005
- Proposal for a New Error Calculus
- Estimation of Measurement Uncertainties — an Alternative to the ISO Guide
- Bureau International des Poids et Mesures (BIPM)
- National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
- National Physical Laboratory
- U.S. Naval Observatory
- National Conference of Standards Laboratories (NCSL)
- Calibration in the pharmaceutical, biotechnology, and medical device industries.
- International Standardization Organization
- Agilent Metrology Forum
- Presentation about Product Quality planning that includes a typical industry “Dimensional Control Plan”
- National Metrology Network of Chile
- National Metrology Laboratory of Malaysia
- UNC Charlotte Center for Precision Metrology
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