Metrohm 840 PC Control 5.0 / Touch Control User Manual

Page 337

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6

Appendix

PC Control / Touch Control

325

Explanation
The statistical calculations in the software have been implemented in

such a way that they are as revisable as possible for the user. This is

why the individual values used in the statistics are in the rounded pres-

entation form selected by the user.
It is not the number of decimal places which is decisive for the accuracy

of the calculations, but rather the number of significant digits of the

decimal numbers displayed. As a result of the binary 32-bit number

format implemented on the basis of the IEEE 754 standard, the decimal

numbers which are produced have 7 reliable significant decimal digits.
You can influence the number of significant digits by selecting the unit

and the number of decimal places. As the results unit to be set some-

times contains both the prefix "milli" and the physical unit itself, the

number of significant digits is altered accordingly in such a case by

three digits.
Example:
The displayed result 1234,56789 mg/L has 7 reliable digits. It is to be

rounded to three decimal places according to the rounding method

given above:

1234,568 mg/L

(7 significant digits, 3 of which are

decimal

places)

With the unit "g/L" the same result 1.23456789 g/L is also rounded to

three decimal places:

1.235 g/L

(4 significant digits, 3 of which are

decimal

places)

The number of significant digits has now been reduced by three to four

digits by omitting the prefix "milli".
You will obtain the smallest loss of rounding accuracy by selecting the

application and number format so that the displayed numbers contain

as many pre-decimal places as possible.
A complete recalculation of the statistics using a pocket calculator or a

PC calculation program can produce variations. This is caused by the

different binary number formats used in these instruments. Whereas the

Titrando calculate with binary 32-bit numbers as described above, PC

programs (e. g. MS-Excel) use a different binary format, e. g. IEEE 754

64-bit.

Note!

The losses of accuracy by rounding described above in the range of

the maximum reliable digits are only of theoretical relevance. Most of

the time they are lower by several orders of magnitude than – as an

example – the uncertainties resulting from weighing out the sample.

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