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This document provides an overview of Chemistry 105 Instrumental Methods in Analytical Chemistry at UC Berkeley in Spring 2017. The course includes a lecture on Mondays and Wednesdays from 9-10 AM in room 219 Dwinelle, as well as labs meeting from 1-5 PM on Mondays through Thursdays in room 305 Latimer. The upcoming lecture topic is listed as Error Analysis & Noise. The document then provides details on concepts like population vs. sample standard deviation, detection limits, normal distributions, confidence intervals, propagation of uncertainty, and improving signal-to-noise ratio through repeated measurements and averaging. Formulas and examples are given for many of these statistical and analytical chemistry concepts.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
90 views16 pages

Note2 PDF

This document provides an overview of Chemistry 105 Instrumental Methods in Analytical Chemistry at UC Berkeley in Spring 2017. The course includes a lecture on Mondays and Wednesdays from 9-10 AM in room 219 Dwinelle, as well as labs meeting from 1-5 PM on Mondays through Thursdays in room 305 Latimer. The upcoming lecture topic is listed as Error Analysis & Noise. The document then provides details on concepts like population vs. sample standard deviation, detection limits, normal distributions, confidence intervals, propagation of uncertainty, and improving signal-to-noise ratio through repeated measurements and averaging. Formulas and examples are given for many of these statistical and analytical chemistry concepts.

Uploaded by

Simon Siu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Spring 2017 CHEMISTRY 105

Instrumental Methods in Analytical Chemistry


Lecture: MW 9 AM 10 AM 219 Dwinelle
Labs: MTuWTh 1 5 PM 305 Latimer

Lecture 2. Error Analysis & Noise

Prof. Ke Xu

1
Q&A

What is population standard deviation vs. sample standard deviation?

Population standard deviation Sample standard deviation

(x x ) (N 1)
N N

(x )
2
= lim i
2
N s= i
N i =1 i =1

Distribution: 1-200 time points


Distribution: 201-400 time points

Definition of detection limit? 20

Detection limit: Count


10
defined as S/N = 3
0
-2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6
Bin Center

2
Normal (Gaussian)
distribution:

1 1 x 2
f ( x) = exp
2 2

Highest probability for close to


Wider spreading for larger

3
Confidence intervals (CI) for a single measurement, known

For a confidence level of 68%,


should be in the interval:
CI for = x z
x

Confidence
z
level
0.8 1.2816
For a confidence level of 95%,
should be in the interval: 0.9 1.6449
0.95 1.9600
1.96 x 1.96 0.98 2.3263
Most often used! 0.99 2.5758
0.995 2.8070
0.998 3.0902
0.999 3.2905
For a confidence level of 99.7%,
should be in the interval:
0.9999 3.8906
0.99999 4.4172
x 3 0.999999 4.8916

4
Propagation of uncertainty
N
= lim (x )
2
i N
For addition or subtraction of data N i =1

For x = x1 x2 x3 ... = 12 + 2 2 + 3 2 ...


Example: total weight

For multiplication or division of data

dxy ydx xdy dxy dx dy


dxy = ydx + xdy = + = +
xy xy xy xy x y

2 2
xy y
= x +
xy x y

Use relative uncertainly for the calculation!

2 2 2
x p q r
For x = p q / r... = + + ...
x p q r
Example: R = U/I
Everything is unit-less 5
6
Repeated measurements averaging of results
Repeated measurements of the same signal: each measurement has the same

Sum: Sum = x1 + x2 + x3 + ... + x N

2 2 2
Uncertainty of sum: sum = 1 + 2 + 3 ... = N 2 = N

1.0

Uncertainty of mean
Mean: x = Sum / N 0.8

0.6

Uncertainty of mean: m = sum / N = / N 0.4

0.2

Uncertainty of Uncertainty of 0.0


the averaged each single 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 1011121314151617181920
# of measurements
5
value measurement

Improvement in S/N
4

Signal Signal
S/N: = N 2

m 1

0
Improved S/N for repeated measurement! 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 1011121314151617181920
# of measurements
Improving S/N through averaging

5
Improvement in S/N
4

0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 1011121314151617181920
# of measurements

7
Confidence intervals (CI) for mean, known

Confidence
z
level
0.8 1.2816
0.9 1.6449
0.95 1.9600
0.98 2.3263
0.99 2.5758
0.995 2.8070
0.998 3.0902
0.999 3.2905
m = / N 0.9999 3.8906
0.99999 4.4172
For a confidence level of 95%, should be in the interval: 0.999999 4.8916

x 1.96 m
CI for = xz
N

x 1.96
N
8
9
CI when is unknown: using s to estimate
With known With unknown

Normal distribution: Student's t-distribution


X-axis is in unit of X-axis is in unit of s

Degree of freedom: = N 1
Approaches normal distribution for
Distribution broadens for smaller : extra
uncertainty when using s to estimate
CI when is unknown
Values of t for different confidence levels

80% 90% 95% 98% 99% 99.9%


1 3.078 6.314 12.710 31.820 63.660 636.600
2 1.886 2.920 4.303 6.965 9.925 31.600
3 1.638 2.353 3.182 4.541 5.841 12.920
4 1.533 2.132 2.776 3.747 4.604 8.610
5 1.476 2.015 2.571 3.365 4.032 6.869
6 1.440 1.943 2.447 3.143 3.707 5.959
7 1.415 1.895 2.365 2.998 3.499 5.408
s
CI for = xt 8 1.397 1.860 2.306 2.896 3.355 5.041
N
9 1.383 1.833 2.262 2.821 3.250 4.781
10 1.372 1.812 2.228 2.764 3.169 4.587
Compared to known :
15 1.341 1.753 2.131 2.602 2.947 4.073

= xz 20 1.325 1.725 2.086 2.528 2.845 3.850
N
50 1.299 1.676 2.009 2.403 2.678 3.496
t>z
100 1.290 1.660 1.984 2.364 2.626 3.390
t z for
1.282 1.645 1.960 2.326 2.576 3.291
10
Example (a1-6)
95% CI for three measurements: 0.084, 0.089, and 0.079
N

x i
0.084 + 0.089 + 0.079
x= i =1
= = 0.084
N 3

(x x )
N
0 + (0.005) 2 + (0.005) 2
(N 1) =
2
s= i = 0.005
i =1 2

s
95% CI: = x t = 2, for 95% CI: t = 4.303
N
0.005
= 0.084 4.303 = 0.084 0.012
3

However, if is known to be 0.005 from previous tests:

0.005
95% CI: = x z = 0.084 1.96 = 0.084 0.006
N 3 11
Experimental sources of noise/uncertainty

Improve S/N by reducing noise!

Chemical Noise
Undesired chemical reactions / interactions
Interfering chemical compounds: needle in a haystack
Fluctuation in humidity

Reduction:
Improve selectivity
Separation
Multidimensional analysis

Instrumental Noise
Associated with each component of the instrument

Thermal (Johnson) Noise


Shot Noise
Flicker (1/f) Noise
Environmental Noise
12
Instrumental noise white noises (f-independent)
Thermal (Johnson) Noise
Thermal (kT) agitation of electrons and other charge carriers

V rms = 4kTRf
Bandwidth
Temperature Resistance
Reduction:
Lower R of the circuits
Lower T: e.g., Liquid-nitrogen cooled detectors
Lower bandwidth of instrument
1
However, f = f t r
3t r Response time (rise time)

Shot Noise
When charged particle crosses a junction. Quantized events statistical fluctuation

= N irms = 2 Ief
Reduction:
Lower bandwidth of instrument 13
Instrumental noise 14

Flicker Noise (1/f noise; pink noise)


Higher noise at lower frequency!

Environmental noise
Hardware devices for noise reduction
Grounding and shielding

15
Thanks!

http://xkcd.com/1347/

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