Difference between revisions of "Spike"
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In the [[laboratory]] world, a '''spike''', as defined by the [[United States Environmental Protection Agency]] via its [[Staged Electronic Data Deliverable|SEDD Specification]] Version 5.2, is "a reanalysis of a regular [[Sample (material)|sample]] done for [[quality control]] purposes with known amounts of target [[analyte]]s added to the sample." The EPA adds that the "data is expected to include an | In the [[laboratory]] world, a '''spike''', as defined by the [[United States Environmental Protection Agency]] via its [[Staged Electronic Data Deliverable|SEDD Specification]] Version 5.2, is "a reanalysis of a regular [[Sample (material)|sample]] done for [[quality control]] purposes with known amounts of target [[analyte]]s added to the sample." The EPA adds that the "data is expected to include an | ||
original client sample ID for each [[sample plus method]] node and, potentially, a percent recovery and an expected result for each analyte for which the analyte type is a | original client sample ID for each [[sample plus method]] node and, potentially, a percent recovery and an expected result for each analyte for which the analyte type is a spike. The original client sample ID identifies the original sample that was spiked."<ref name="SEDD52">{{cite web |url=http://www.epa.gov/fem/seddspec52.htm |title=SEDD Specification 5.2 Resources |author=U.S. Environmental Protection Agency |date=06 July 2011 |accessdate=20 May 2014}}</ref> | ||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 22:19, 22 September 2022
In the laboratory world, a spike, as defined by the United States Environmental Protection Agency via its SEDD Specification Version 5.2, is "a reanalysis of a regular sample done for quality control purposes with known amounts of target analytes added to the sample." The EPA adds that the "data is expected to include an original client sample ID for each sample plus method node and, potentially, a percent recovery and an expected result for each analyte for which the analyte type is a spike. The original client sample ID identifies the original sample that was spiked."[1]
References
- ↑ U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (6 July 2011). "SEDD Specification 5.2 Resources". http://www.epa.gov/fem/seddspec52.htm. Retrieved 20 May 2014.