The limit of detection (LOD) is the smallest amount of analyte that can be distinguished from the background noise. The LOD value corresponds to the concentration at which the analyte signal is three times larger than the standard deviation of the blank signal. Below this value, the analyte signal cannot be differentiated from the background noise. It is calculated by dividing the calibration slope by 3 times the standard deviation of the blank signals.
The LOD indicates the presence or absence of an analyte but is usually too low to be reliably quantified. For quantification, we need another value called the limit of quantification, which is defined as the lowest quantity of analyte that the instrument can quantify. Its value corresponds to the concentration at which the signal is ten times larger than the standard deviation of the blank signal.
From Chapter 1:
Now Playing
Chemical Applications of Statistical Analyses
5.3K Views
Chemical Applications of Statistical Analyses
1.4K Views
Chemical Applications of Statistical Analyses
2.9K Views
Chemical Applications of Statistical Analyses
5.5K Views
Chemical Applications of Statistical Analyses
1.4K Views
Chemical Applications of Statistical Analyses
1.4K Views
Chemical Applications of Statistical Analyses
798 Views
Chemical Applications of Statistical Analyses
5.2K Views
Chemical Applications of Statistical Analyses
319 Views
Chemical Applications of Statistical Analyses
495 Views
Chemical Applications of Statistical Analyses
620 Views
Chemical Applications of Statistical Analyses
450 Views
Chemical Applications of Statistical Analyses
3.1K Views
Chemical Applications of Statistical Analyses
3.3K Views
Chemical Applications of Statistical Analyses
1.6K Views
See More
Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved
We use cookies to enhance your experience on our website.
By continuing to use our website or clicking “Continue”, you are agreeing to accept our cookies.