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New ISO committee for reference materials

26 April 2021 | News
by Ian Michael

The need for accurate measurement results that are comparable between laboratories anywhere in the world has never been greater. To achieve this, one needs metrologically traceable reference materials for use in the calibration and validation of measurement methods—certified reference materials (CRMs). Reference materials in general also play an important part in other aspects of quality assurance in testing, and a new ISO technical committee in this field has just been formed.

ISO/TC 334, Reference materials, will develop standards related to the competent production and use of reference materials, including the concepts, performance characteristics, terms and definitions related to reference materials. It replaces a former ISO committee known as ISO/REMCO, building on its existing work and developing new ISO deliverables for the future.

These include, as examples, ISO Guide 30:2015 (under revision), Reference materials – Selected terms and definitions, ISO Guide 33:2015, Reference materials – Good practice in using reference materials and ISO Guide 35:2017, Reference materials – Guidance for characterization and assessment of homogeneity and stability.

New documents in development are ISO Guide 86.2, Guidance for pure reference materials for small organic molecules, and ISO Guide 87, Guidance for “pure” reference materials for metals and metalloids.

The committee consists of experts in a range of diverse fields from nearly 40 countries. Anyone interested in getting involved should contact their national ISO member. The secretariat of ISO/TC 334 is held by SABS, the ISO member for South Africa.

Quality Matters Column Editor comments: “Whilst essentially the structure of TC 334 will ‘mirror’ that of ISO/REMCO, the significant change is that TC 334 (as a Technical Committee of ISO) will have the capability and be tasked with producing appropriate ISO standards relating to the production, certification and use of reference materials.”

You may also be interested in John’s recent column article on ISO, Four generations of quality: International Standards Organization (ISO).

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