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Scope of the presentation • Introduction • th Potential Impacts of the 4 Industrial Revolution on Laboratories • Testing techniques – methodologies • Food for thought - considerations Introduction • Fourth Industrial Revolution – “a new era that builds and extends the impact of digitization in new and unanticipated ways” (Davis, 2016). Revolution 1 – Year: Revolution 3 – Year: 1784 (steam, water, 1969 (electronics, IT mechanical production and automated equipment) production) Revolution 2 – Year: Revolution 4 – 1870 (division of Year: ???? (cyber- labour, electricity physical systems), and mass Klaus Schwab in production) 2016 th Potential Impacts of the 4 Industrial Revolution • Automation - Semi-automated data management (capturing and manipulation) versus fully v/s automated data management (capturing and manipulation) • Technological advancement v/s - Manual laboratory activities versus automated activities. • Laboratory infrastructure - Environmental control where manual thermometers are used versus automated v/s environmental control. • Country economical development level v/s - Laboratories from developing countries are mostly focused on labour intensive manual methodologies versus laboratories in developed countries employing a higher percentage of automation i.e. instrumental analysis. Testing techniques - methodologies • Mohr method (argentometric titrations) - Most affordable method, unable to distinguish between different sources of the determinant - (Cl) Chemical Reaction of Mohr Method • Potentiometric method (auto-titration) Source: www.BCLearningNetwork.com (Colgur, 2014) - Fairly affordable method, can handle reasonable number of samples but still will fail to distinguish - different sources of the determinant (Cl) • Elemental analysis (Inductively Coupled Plasma Optical Emission Spectrometer, ICP- OES) - Expensive method, very selective and accurate thus also can handle large sample numbers Food for thought - considerations • Competitiveness of the laboratory - Investment in instrumentation (preferably fairly recent technologies) - Infrastructure (environmental controls and proper IT platforms) - Training/retraining of personnel to be competent with recent methodologies - Quality costs (participation in Proficiency Testing schemes, continuous improvement, maintenance of the quality management systems)
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