C3.1.4 - Chemical Measurements

Cards (2)

  • Explain what is meant by measurement uncertainty.
     The margin of doubt that exists for the result of any measurement, as well as how significant the doubt is. For example, a piece of string may measure 20 cm plus or minus 1 cm, at the 95% confidence level. As a result, this could be written: 20 cm ±1 cm, with a confidence of 95%.
  • Represent the distribution of results and estimate uncertainty.
    The uncertainty of a measuring instrument is estimated as plus or minus (±) half the smallest scale division. For a thermometer with a mark at every 1.0°C, the uncertainty is ± 0.5°C. This means that if a student reads a value from this thermometer as 24.0°C, they could give the result as 24.0°C ± 0.5°C.
    For a digital measuring instrument, the uncertainty is half the last digit shown on its display. For a timer reading to 0.1 s, the uncertainty is ± 0.05 s.