Abstract.
The 2002 IUPAC recommendation on pH (provisional) has taken its own philosophy to provide a basis for comparable and traceable assignment of a value, from a measurement, to the quantity pH. Whereas the substituted 1983 IUPAC recommendation relied heavily on precisely prescribed experimental techniques and procedures, the current recommendation defines a hierarchical relationship between references for comparison (primary and secondary standards) and objective criteria on the comparison of measurements with these standards. The recommendation aims at a traceability chain from the national metrological institution (NMI) level down to field and laboratory measurements. Currently, however, the traceability chain is developed to the level of certified reference materials (CRM), namely the above mentioned primary and secondary standards. To complete the traceability chain, several theoretical and practical aspects have to be pondered. In part, the methods for comparative assessment of different options have yet to be developed. As an illustrating example of the complexity of issues to be considered in a further extension of the traceability chain is estimation of the doubt associated with Pitzer coefficients. The Pitzer equations for activity coefficient modelling are explicitly mentioned in the 2002 IUPAC recommendation on pH (provisional) as enabling possible improvement in the ionic strength extrapolations to zero ionic strength. An assessment of uncertainty of ternary Pitzer coefficients is given for the first time.
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Meinrath, G. Extended traceability of pH: an evaluation of the role of Pitzer's equations. Anal Bioanal Chem 374, 796–805 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00216-002-1547-9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00216-002-1547-9