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Parts-per notation

In science and engineering, the parts-per notation is a set of pseudo-units to describe small values of miscellaneous dimensionless quantities, e.g. mole fraction or mass fraction. Since these fractions are quantity-per-quantity measures, they are pure numbers with no associated units of measurement. Commonly used are parts-per-million (ppm, 10−6), parts-per-billion (ppb, 10−9), parts-per-trillion (ppt, 10−12) and parts-per-quadrillion (ppq, 10−15). This notation is not part of the International System of Units (SI) system and its meaning is ambiguous.

Fluorescein aqueous solutions, diluted from 10,000 to 1 parts-per-million in intervals of 10 fold dilution. At 1 ppm the solution is a very pale yellow. As the concentration increases the colour becomes a more vibrant yellow, then orange, with the final 10,000 ppm a deep red colour.

Applications edit

Parts-per notation is often used describing dilute solutions in chemistry, for instance, the relative abundance of dissolved minerals or pollutants in water. The quantity "1 ppm" can be used for a mass fraction if a water-borne pollutant is present at one-millionth of a gram per gram of sample solution. When working with aqueous solutions, it is common to assume that the density of water is 1.00 g/mL. Therefore, it is common to equate 1 kilogram of water with 1 L of water. Consequently, 1 ppm corresponds to 1 mg/L and 1 ppb corresponds to 1 μg/L.

Similarly, parts-per notation is used also in physics and engineering to express the value of various proportional phenomena. For instance, a special metal alloy might expand 1.2 micrometers per meter of length for every degree Celsius and this would be expressed as "α = 1.2 ppm/°C". Parts-per notation is also employed to denote the change, stability, or uncertainty in measurements. For instance, the accuracy of land-survey distance measurements when using a laser rangefinder might be 1 millimeter per kilometer of distance; this could be expressed as "Accuracy = 1 ppm."[a]

Parts-per notations are all dimensionless quantities: in mathematical expressions, the units of measurement always cancel. In fractions like "2 nanometers per meter" (2 n m / m = 2 nano = 2×10−9 = 2 ppb = 2 × 0.000000001), so the quotients are pure-number coefficients with positive values less than or equal to 1. When parts-per notations, including the percent symbol (%), are used in regular prose (as opposed to mathematical expressions), they are still pure-number dimensionless quantities. However, they generally take the literal "parts per" meaning of a comparative ratio (e.g. "2 ppb" would generally be interpreted as "two parts in a billion parts").[1]

Parts-per notations may be expressed in terms of any unit of the same measure. For instance, the expansion coefficient of some brass alloy, α = 18.7 ppm/°C, may be expressed as 18.7 (μm/m)/°C, or as 18.7 (μ in/in)/°C; the numeric value representing a relative proportion does not change with the adoption of a different unit of length.[b] Similarly, a metering pump that injects a trace chemical into the main process line at the proportional flow rate Qp = 12 ppm, is doing so at a rate that may be expressed in a variety of volumetric units, including 125 μL/L, 125 μ gal / gal, 125 cm3/m3, etc.

In nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR), chemical shift is usually expressed in ppm. It represents the difference of a measured frequency in parts per million from the reference frequency. The reference frequency depends on the instrument's magnetic field and the element being measured. It is usually expressed in MHz. Typical chemical shifts are rarely more than a few hundred Hz from the reference frequency, so chemical shifts are conveniently expressed in ppm (Hz/MHz). Parts-per notation gives a dimensionless quantity that does not depend on the instrument's field strength.

Parts-per expressions edit

1 of →
= ⭨
of ↓  
per
cent
(%)
per
mille
(‰)
per
10,000
(‱)
per
100,000
(pcm)
per
million
(ppm)
per
billion
(ppb)
% 1 0.1 0.01 0.001 0.0001 10−7
10 1 0.1 0.01 0.001 10−6
100 10 1 0.1 0.01 10−5
pcm 1,000 100 10 1 0.1 0.0001
ppm 10,000 1,000 100 10 1 0.001
ppb 107 106 105 10,000 1,000 1
 
Visualisation of 1%, 1‰, 1‱, 1 pcm and 1 ppm as fractions of the large block (larger version)

  • One part per thousand should generally be spelled out in full and not as "ppt" (which is usually understood to represent "parts per trillion"). It may also be denoted by the permille sign (‰). Note however, that specific disciplines such as oceanography, as well as educational exercises, do use the "ppt" abbreviation. "One part per thousand" denotes one part per 1,000 (103) parts, and a value of 10−3. This is equivalent to about ninety seconds out of one day.
  • One part per ten thousand is denoted by the permyriad sign (‱). Although rarely used in science (ppm is typically used instead), one permyriad has an unambiguous value of one part per 10,000 (104) parts, and a value of 10−4. This is equivalent to about nine seconds out of one day.
    In contrast, in finance, the basis point is typically used to denote changes in or differences between percentage interest rates (although it can also be used in other cases where it is desirable to express quantities in hundredths of a percent). For instance, a change in an interest rate from 5.15% per annum to 5.35% per annum could be denoted as a change of 20 basis points (per annum). As with interest rates, the words "per annum" (or "per year") are often omitted. In that case, the basis point is a quantity with a dimension of (time−1).[2]
  • One part per hundred thousand, per cent mille (pcm) or milli-percent denotes one part per 100,000 (105) parts, and a value of 10−5. It is commonly used in epidemiology for mortality, crime and disease prevalence rates, and nuclear reactor engineering as a unit of reactivity. In time measurement it is equivalent to about 5 minutes out of a year; in distance measurement, it is equivalent to 1 cm of error per km of distance traversed.

  • One part per million (ppm) denotes one part per 1,000,000 (106) parts, and a value of 10−6. It is equivalent to about 32 seconds out of a year or 1 mm of error per km of distance traversed. In mining, it is also equivalent to one gram per metric ton, expressed as g/t.

  • One part per billion (ppb) denotes one part per 1,000,000,000 (109) parts, and a value of 10−9. This is equivalent to about three seconds out of a century.

  • One part per trillion (ppt) denotes one part per 1,000,000,000,000 (1012) parts, and a value of 10−12. This is equivalent to about thirty seconds out of every million years.

  • One part per quadrillion (ppq) denotes one part per 1,000,000,000,000,000 (1015) parts, and a value of 10−15. This is equivalent to about two and a half minutes out of the age of the Earth (4.5 billion years). Although relatively uncommon in analytical chemistry, measurements at the ppq level are sometimes performed.[3]

Criticism edit

Although the International Bureau of Weights and Measures (an international standards organization known also by its French-language initials BIPM) recognizes the use of parts-per notation, it is not formally part of the International System of Units (SI).[1] Note that although "percent" (%) is not formally part of the SI, both the BIPM and the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) take the position that "in mathematical expressions, the internationally recognized symbol % (percent) may be used with the SI to represent the number 0.01" for dimensionless quantities.[1][4] According to IUPAP, "a continued source of annoyance to unit purists has been the continued use of percent, ppm, ppb, and ppt".[5] Although SI-compliant expressions should be used as an alternative, the parts-per notation remains nevertheless widely used in technical disciplines. The main problems with the parts-per notation are set out below.

Long and short scales edit

Because the named numbers starting with a "billion" have different values in different countries, the BIPM suggests avoiding the use of "ppb" and "ppt" to prevent misunderstanding. The U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) takes the stringent position, stating that "the language-dependent terms [...] are not acceptable for use with the SI to express the values of quantities".[6]

Thousand vs. trillion edit

Although "ppt" usually means "parts per trillion", it occasionally means "parts per thousand". Unless the meaning of "ppt" is defined explicitly, it has to be determined from the context.[citation needed]

Mass fraction vs. mole fraction vs. volume fraction edit

Another problem of the parts-per notation is that it may refer to mass fraction, mole fraction or volume fraction. Since it is usually not stated which quantity is used, it is better to write the units out, such as kg/kg, mol/mol or m3/m3, even though they are all dimensionless.[7] The difference is quite significant when dealing with gases, and it is very important to specify which quantity is being used. For example, the conversion factor between a mass fraction of 1 ppb and a mole fraction of 1 ppb is about 4.7 for the greenhouse gas CFC-11 in air. For volume fraction, the suffix "V" or "v" is sometimes appended to the parts-per notation (e.g. ppmV, ppbv, pptv).[8][9] However, ppbv and pptv are also often used for mole fractions (which is identical to volume fraction only for ideal gases).

To distinguish the mass fraction from volume fraction or mole fraction, the letter "w" (standing for "weight") is sometimes added to the abbreviation (e.g. ppmw, ppbw).[10]

The usage of the parts-per notation is generally quite fixed within each specific branch of science, but often in a way that is inconsistent with its usage in other branches, leading some researchers to assume that their own usage (mass/mass, mol/mol, volume/volume, mass/volume, or others) is correct and that other usages are incorrect. This assumption sometimes leads them to not specify the details of their own usage in their publications, and others may therefore misinterpret their results. For example, electrochemists often use volume/volume, while chemical engineers may use mass/mass as well as volume/volume, while chemists, the field of occupational safety and the field of permissible exposure limit (e.g. permitted gas exposure limit in air) may use mass/volume. Unfortunatelly, many academic publications of otherwise excellent level fail to specify their use of the parts-per notation, which irritates some readers, especially those who are not experts in the particular fields in those publications, because parts-per-notation, without specifying what it stands for, can mean anything.[citation needed]

SI-compliant expressions edit

SI-compliant units that can be used as alternatives are shown in the chart below. Expressions that the BIPM explicitly does not recognize as being suitable for denoting dimensionless quantities with the SI are marked with !.

Notations for dimensionless quantities
Measure SI
units
Named
parts-per ratio
(short scale)
Parts-per
abbreviation
or symbol
Value in
scientific
notation
A strain of... 2 cm/m 2 parts per hundred     2%[11] 2 × 10−2
A sensitivity of... 2 mV/V 2 parts per thousand 2 ‰ ! 2 × 10−3
A sensitivity of... 0.2 mV/V 2 parts per ten thousand 2 ‱ ! 2 × 10−4
A sensitivity of... 2 μV/V 2 parts per million 2 ppm 2 × 10−6
A sensitivity of... 2 nV/V 2 parts per billion ! 2 ppb ! 2 × 10−9
A sensitivity of... 2 pV/V 2 parts per trillion ! 2 ppt ! 2 × 10−12
A mass fraction of... 2 mg/kg 2 parts per million 2 ppm 2 × 10−6
A mass fraction of... 2 μg/kg 2 parts per billion ! 2 ppb ! 2 × 10−9
A mass fraction of... 2 ng/kg 2 parts per trillion ! 2 ppt ! 2 × 10−12
A mass fraction of... 2 pg/kg 2 parts per quadrillion ! 2 ppq ! 2 × 10−15
A volume fraction of... 5.2 μL/L 5.2 parts per million 5.2 ppm 5.2 × 10−6
A mole fraction of... 5.24 μmol/mol 5.24 parts per million 5.24 ppm 5.24 × 10−6
A mole fraction of... 5.24 nmol/mol 5.24 parts per billion ! 5.24 ppb ! 5.24 × 10−9
A mole fraction of... 5.24 pmol/mol 5.24 parts per trillion ! 5.24 ppt ! 5.24 × 10−12
A stability of... 1 (μA/A)/min 1 part per million per minute 1 ppm/min 1 × 10−6/min
A change of... 5 nΩ/Ω 5 parts per billion ! 5 ppb ! 5 × 10−9
An uncertainty of... 9 μg/kg 9 parts per billion ! 9 ppb ! 9 × 10−9
A shift of... 1 nm/m 1 part per billion ! 1 ppb ! 1 × 10−9
A strain of... 1 μm/m 1 part per million 1 ppm 1 × 10−6
A temperature coefficient of... 0.3 (μHz/Hz)/°C 0.3 part per million per °C 0.3 ppm/°C 0.3 × 10−6/°C
A frequency change of... 0.35 × 10−9 ƒ 0.35 part per billion ! 0.35 ppb ! 0.35 × 10−9

Note that the notations in the "SI units" column above are for the most part dimensionless quantities; that is, the units of measurement factor out in expressions like "1 nm/m" (1 nm/m =1 × 10−9) so the ratios are pure-number coefficients with values less than 1.

Uno (proposed dimensionless unit) edit

Because of the cumbersome nature of expressing certain dimensionless quantities per SI guidelines, the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics (IUPAP) in 1999 proposed the adoption of the special name "uno" (symbol: U) to represent the number 1 in dimensionless quantities.[5] In 2004, a report to the International Committee for Weights and Measures (CIPM) stated that the response to the proposal of the uno "had been almost entirely negative", and the principal proponent "recommended dropping the idea".[12] To date, the uno has not been adopted by any standards organization.

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ This is a simplified explanation. Laser rangefinders typically have a measurement "granularity" of one to ten millimeters; thus, the complete specification for distance measurement accuracy might read as follows: "Accuracy ±(1 mm + 1 ppm)". Consequently, a distance measurement of only a few meters would still have an accuracy of ±1 mm in this example.
  2. ^ In the particular case of coefficient of thermal expansion, the change to inches (one of the U.S. customary units) is typically also accompanied by a change to degrees Fahrenheit. Since a Fahrenheit-sized interval of temperature is only  5 /9 that of a Celsius-sized interval, the value is typically expressed as 10.4 (μ in/in)/°F rather than 18.7 (μ in/in)/°C.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Stating values of dimensionless quantities, or quantities of dimension one". BIPM. § 5.3.7.
  2. ^ "Basis Points (BPS)". Corporate Finance Institute.
  3. ^ Measurements of dioxin are routinely made at the sub-ppq level. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) currently sets a hard limit of 30 ppq for dioxin in drinking water but once recommended a voluntary limit of 0.013 ppq. Also, radioactive contaminants in drinking water, which are quantified by measuring their radiation, are often reported in terms of ppq; 0.013 ppq is equivalent to the thickness of a sheet of paper versus a journey of 146000 trips around the world. 
  4. ^ Quantities and units. Part 0: General principles, ISO 31-0:1992.
  5. ^ a b Petley, Brian W. (September 1998). "Report on Recent Committee Activities on Behalf of IUPAP to the 1999 IUPAP General Assembly". from the original on 2017-08-15. Retrieved 2017-08-15.
  6. ^ NIST: Rules and Style Conventions for Expressing Values of Quantities: 7.10.3 ppm, ppb, and ppt.
  7. ^ Schwartz, S.E.; Warneck, P. (1995). "Units for use in atmospheric chemistry (IUPAC Recommendations 1995)" (PDF). Pure and Applied Chemistry. 67 (8–9): 1377–1406. doi:10.1351/pac199567081377. S2CID 7029702.
  8. ^ "EPA on-line tools for site assessment calculation: Indoor air unit Conversion". Environmental Protection Agency.
  9. ^ Beychok, Milton R. (2005). "Air dispersion modeling conversions and formulas". Fundamentals of Stack Gas Dispersion (4th ed.). Milton R. Beychok. ISBN 0964458802.
  10. ^ "Units". Introduction to green engineering. University of Virginia. 23 August 2012.
  11. ^ According to BIPM's SI brochure, section 5.3.7, "When [the percent symbol] is used, a space separates the number and the symbol %." This practice has not been well adopted with regard to the % symbol, is contrary to Wikipedia's Manual of Style, and is not observed here.
  12. ^ Consultative Committee for Units (13–14 May 2004). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-03-10.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Parts-per notation at Wikimedia Commons
  • National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
  • International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM)

parts, notation, parts, billion, redirects, here, film, parts, billion, science, engineering, parts, notation, pseudo, units, describe, small, values, miscellaneous, dimensionless, quantities, mole, fraction, mass, fraction, since, these, fractions, quantity, . Parts per billion redirects here For the film see Parts per Billion In science and engineering the parts per notation is a set of pseudo units to describe small values of miscellaneous dimensionless quantities e g mole fraction or mass fraction Since these fractions are quantity per quantity measures they are pure numbers with no associated units of measurement Commonly used are parts per million ppm 10 6 parts per billion ppb 10 9 parts per trillion ppt 10 12 and parts per quadrillion ppq 10 15 This notation is not part of the International System of Units SI system and its meaning is ambiguous Fluorescein aqueous solutions diluted from 10 000 to 1 parts per million in intervals of 10 fold dilution At 1 ppm the solution is a very pale yellow As the concentration increases the colour becomes a more vibrant yellow then orange with the final 10 000 ppm a deep red colour Contents 1 Applications 2 Parts per expressions 3 Criticism 3 1 Long and short scales 3 2 Thousand vs trillion 3 3 Mass fraction vs mole fraction vs volume fraction 4 SI compliant expressions 5 Uno proposed dimensionless unit 6 Footnotes 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksApplications editParts per notation is often used describing dilute solutions in chemistry for instance the relative abundance of dissolved minerals or pollutants in water The quantity 1 ppm can be used for a mass fraction if a water borne pollutant is present at one millionth of a gram per gram of sample solution When working with aqueous solutions it is common to assume that the density of water is 1 00 g mL Therefore it is common to equate 1 kilogram of water with 1 L of water Consequently 1 ppm corresponds to 1 mg L and 1 ppb corresponds to 1 mg L Similarly parts per notation is used also in physics and engineering to express the value of various proportional phenomena For instance a special metal alloy might expand 1 2 micrometers per meter of length for every degree Celsius and this would be expressed as a 1 2 ppm C Parts per notation is also employed to denote the change stability or uncertainty in measurements For instance the accuracy of land survey distance measurements when using a laser rangefinder might be 1 millimeter per kilometer of distance this could be expressed as Accuracy 1 ppm a Parts per notations are all dimensionless quantities in mathematical expressions the units of measurement always cancel In fractions like 2 nanometers per meter 2 n m m 2 nano 2 10 9 2 ppb 2 0 000000 001 so the quotients are pure number coefficients with positive values less than or equal to 1 When parts per notations including the percent symbol are used in regular prose as opposed to mathematical expressions they are still pure number dimensionless quantities However they generally take the literal parts per meaning of a comparative ratio e g 2 ppb would generally be interpreted as two parts in a billion parts 1 Parts per notations may be expressed in terms of any unit of the same measure For instance the expansion coefficient of some brass alloy a 18 7 ppm C may be expressed as 18 7 mm m C or as 18 7 m in in C the numeric value representing a relative proportion does not change with the adoption of a different unit of length b Similarly a metering pump that injects a trace chemical into the main process line at the proportional flow rate Qp 12 ppm is doing so at a rate that may be expressed in a variety of volumetric units including 125 mL L 125 m gal gal 125 cm3 m3 etc In nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy NMR chemical shift is usually expressed in ppm It represents the difference of a measured frequency in parts per million from the reference frequency The reference frequency depends on the instrument s magnetic field and the element being measured It is usually expressed in MHz Typical chemical shifts are rarely more than a few hundred Hz from the reference frequency so chemical shifts are conveniently expressed in ppm Hz MHz Parts per notation gives a dimensionless quantity that does not depend on the instrument s field strength Parts per expressions edit1 of of percent permille per10 000 per100 000 pcm permillion ppm perbillion ppb 1 0 1 0 01 0 001 0 0001 10 7 10 1 0 1 0 01 0 001 10 6 100 10 1 0 1 0 01 10 5pcm 1 000 100 10 1 0 1 0 0001ppm 10 000 1 000 100 10 1 0 001ppb 107 106 105 10 000 1 000 1 nbsp Visualisation of 1 1 1 1 pcm and 1 ppm as fractions of the large block larger version One part per hundred is generally represented by the percent sign and denotes one part per 100 102 parts and a value of 10 2 This is equivalent to about fourteen minutes out of one day One part per thousand should generally be spelled out in full and not as ppt which is usually understood to represent parts per trillion It may also be denoted by the permille sign Note however that specific disciplines such as oceanography as well as educational exercises do use the ppt abbreviation One part per thousand denotes one part per 1 000 103 parts and a value of 10 3 This is equivalent to about ninety seconds out of one day One part per ten thousand is denoted by the permyriad sign Although rarely used in science ppm is typically used instead one permyriad has an unambiguous value of one part per 10 000 104 parts and a value of 10 4 This is equivalent to about nine seconds out of one day In contrast in finance the basis point is typically used to denote changes in or differences between percentage interest rates although it can also be used in other cases where it is desirable to express quantities in hundredths of a percent For instance a change in an interest rate from 5 15 per annum to 5 35 per annum could be denoted as a change of 20 basis points per annum As with interest rates the words per annum or per year are often omitted In that case the basis point is a quantity with a dimension of time 1 2 One part per hundred thousand per cent mille pcm or milli percent denotes one part per 100 000 105 parts and a value of 10 5 It is commonly used in epidemiology for mortality crime and disease prevalence rates and nuclear reactor engineering as a unit of reactivity In time measurement it is equivalent to about 5 minutes out of a year in distance measurement it is equivalent to 1 cm of error per km of distance traversed One part per million ppm denotes one part per 1 000 000 106 parts and a value of 10 6 It is equivalent to about 32 seconds out of a year or 1 mm of error per km of distance traversed In mining it is also equivalent to one gram per metric ton expressed as g t One part per billion ppb denotes one part per 1 000 000 000 109 parts and a value of 10 9 This is equivalent to about three seconds out of a century One part per trillion ppt denotes one part per 1 000 000 000 000 1012 parts and a value of 10 12 This is equivalent to about thirty seconds out of every million years One part per quadrillion ppq denotes one part per 1 000 000 000 000 000 1015 parts and a value of 10 15 This is equivalent to about two and a half minutes out of the age of the Earth 4 5 billion years Although relatively uncommon in analytical chemistry measurements at the ppq level are sometimes performed 3 Criticism editAlthough the International Bureau of Weights and Measures an international standards organization known also by its French language initials BIPM recognizes the use of parts per notation it is not formally part of the International System of Units SI 1 Note that although percent is not formally part of the SI both the BIPM and the International Organization for Standardization ISO take the position that in mathematical expressions the internationally recognized symbol percent may be used with the SI to represent the number 0 01 for dimensionless quantities 1 4 According to IUPAP a continued source of annoyance to unit purists has been the continued use of percent ppm ppb and ppt 5 Although SI compliant expressions should be used as an alternative the parts per notation remains nevertheless widely used in technical disciplines The main problems with the parts per notation are set out below Long and short scales edit Main article Long and short scales Because the named numbers starting with a billion have different values in different countries the BIPM suggests avoiding the use of ppb and ppt to prevent misunderstanding The U S National Institute of Standards and Technology NIST takes the stringent position stating that the language dependent terms are not acceptable for use with the SI to express the values of quantities 6 Thousand vs trillion edit Although ppt usually means parts per trillion it occasionally means parts per thousand Unless the meaning of ppt is defined explicitly it has to be determined from the context citation needed Mass fraction vs mole fraction vs volume fraction edit Another problem of the parts per notation is that it may refer to mass fraction mole fraction or volume fraction Since it is usually not stated which quantity is used it is better to write the units out such as kg kg mol mol or m3 m3 even though they are all dimensionless 7 The difference is quite significant when dealing with gases and it is very important to specify which quantity is being used For example the conversion factor between a mass fraction of 1 ppb and a mole fraction of 1 ppb is about 4 7 for the greenhouse gas CFC 11 in air For volume fraction the suffix V or v is sometimes appended to the parts per notation e g ppmV ppbv pptv 8 9 However ppbv and pptv are also often used for mole fractions which is identical to volume fraction only for ideal gases To distinguish the mass fraction from volume fraction or mole fraction the letter w standing for weight is sometimes added to the abbreviation e g ppmw ppbw 10 The usage of the parts per notation is generally quite fixed within each specific branch of science but often in a way that is inconsistent with its usage in other branches leading some researchers to assume that their own usage mass mass mol mol volume volume mass volume or others is correct and that other usages are incorrect This assumption sometimes leads them to not specify the details of their own usage in their publications and others may therefore misinterpret their results For example electrochemists often use volume volume while chemical engineers may use mass mass as well as volume volume while chemists the field of occupational safety and the field of permissible exposure limit e g permitted gas exposure limit in air may use mass volume Unfortunatelly many academic publications of otherwise excellent level fail to specify their use of the parts per notation which irritates some readers especially those who are not experts in the particular fields in those publications because parts per notation without specifying what it stands for can mean anything citation needed SI compliant expressions editSI compliant units that can be used as alternatives are shown in the chart below Expressions that the BIPM explicitly does not recognize as being suitable for denoting dimensionless quantities with the SI are marked with Notations for dimensionless quantities Measure SIunits Namedparts per ratio short scale Parts perabbreviationor symbol Value inscientificnotationA strain of 2 cm m 2 parts per hundred 2 11 2 10 2A sensitivity of 2 mV V 2 parts per thousand 2 2 10 3A sensitivity of 0 2 mV V 2 parts per ten thousand 2 2 10 4A sensitivity of 2 mV V 2 parts per million 2 ppm 2 10 6A sensitivity of 2 nV V 2 parts per billion 2 ppb 2 10 9A sensitivity of 2 pV V 2 parts per trillion 2 ppt 2 10 12A mass fraction of 2 mg kg 2 parts per million 2 ppm 2 10 6A mass fraction of 2 mg kg 2 parts per billion 2 ppb 2 10 9A mass fraction of 2 ng kg 2 parts per trillion 2 ppt 2 10 12A mass fraction of 2 pg kg 2 parts per quadrillion 2 ppq 2 10 15A volume fraction of 5 2 mL L 5 2 parts per million 5 2 ppm 5 2 10 6A mole fraction of 5 24 mmol mol 5 24 parts per million 5 24 ppm 5 24 10 6A mole fraction of 5 24 nmol mol 5 24 parts per billion 5 24 ppb 5 24 10 9A mole fraction of 5 24 pmol mol 5 24 parts per trillion 5 24 ppt 5 24 10 12A stability of 1 mA A min 1 part per million per minute 1 ppm min 1 10 6 minA change of 5 nW W 5 parts per billion 5 ppb 5 10 9An uncertainty of 9 mg kg 9 parts per billion 9 ppb 9 10 9A shift of 1 nm m 1 part per billion 1 ppb 1 10 9A strain of 1 mm m 1 part per million 1 ppm 1 10 6A temperature coefficient of 0 3 mHz Hz C 0 3 part per million per C 0 3 ppm C 0 3 10 6 CA frequency change of 0 35 10 9 ƒ 0 35 part per billion 0 35 ppb 0 35 10 9Note that the notations in the SI units column above are for the most part dimensionless quantities that is the units of measurement factor out in expressions like 1 nm m 1 nm m 1 10 9 so the ratios are pure number coefficients with values less than 1 Uno proposed dimensionless unit editBecause of the cumbersome nature of expressing certain dimensionless quantities per SI guidelines the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics IUPAP in 1999 proposed the adoption of the special name uno symbol U to represent the number 1 in dimensionless quantities 5 In 2004 a report to the International Committee for Weights and Measures CIPM stated that the response to the proposal of the uno had been almost entirely negative and the principal proponent recommended dropping the idea 12 To date the uno has not been adopted by any standards organization Footnotes edit This is a simplified explanation Laser rangefinders typically have a measurement granularity of one to ten millimeters thus the complete specification for distance measurement accuracy might read as follows Accuracy 1 mm 1 ppm Consequently a distance measurement of only a few meters would still have an accuracy of 1 mm in this example In the particular case of coefficient of thermal expansion the change to inches one of the U S customary units is typically also accompanied by a change to degrees Fahrenheit Since a Fahrenheit sized interval of temperature is only 5 9 that of a Celsius sized interval the value is typically expressed as 10 4 m in in F rather than 18 7 m in in C See also editInternational Electrotechnical Commission IEC Milligram per cent Percentage 1 part in 100 Per mille 1 part in 1 000 Permyriad 1 part in 10 000 Per cent mille pcm 1 part in 100 000 Per unit systemReferences edit a b c Stating values of dimensionless quantities or quantities of dimension one BIPM 5 3 7 Basis Points BPS Corporate Finance Institute Measurements of dioxin are routinely made at the sub ppq level The U S Environmental Protection Agency EPA currently sets a hard limit of 30 ppq for dioxin in drinking water but once recommended a voluntary limit of 0 013 ppq Also radioactive contaminants in drinking water which are quantified by measuring their radiation are often reported in terms of ppq 0 013 ppq is equivalent to the thickness of a sheet of paper versus a journey of 146000 trips around the world Quantities and units Part 0 General principles ISO 31 0 1992 a b Petley Brian W September 1998 Report on Recent Committee Activities on Behalf of IUPAP to the 1999 IUPAP General Assembly Archived from the original on 2017 08 15 Retrieved 2017 08 15 NIST Rules and Style Conventions for Expressing Values of Quantities 7 10 3 ppm ppb and ppt Schwartz S E Warneck P 1995 Units for use in atmospheric chemistry IUPAC Recommendations 1995 PDF Pure and Applied Chemistry 67 8 9 1377 1406 doi 10 1351 pac199567081377 S2CID 7029702 EPA on line tools for site assessment calculation Indoor air unit Conversion Environmental Protection Agency Beychok Milton R 2005 Air dispersion modeling conversions and formulas Fundamentals of Stack Gas Dispersion 4th ed Milton R Beychok ISBN 0964458802 Units Introduction to green engineering University of Virginia 23 August 2012 According to BIPM s SI brochure section 5 3 7 When the percent symbol is used a space separates the number and the symbol This practice has not been well adopted with regard to the symbol is contrary to Wikipedia s Manual of Style and is not observed here Consultative Committee for Units 13 14 May 2004 Report of the 16th meeting 13 14 May 2004 to the International Committee for Weights and Measures of the International Bureau of Weights and Measures PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2014 03 10 External links edit nbsp Look up ppm ppb ppt or ppq in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Media related to Parts per notation at Wikimedia Commons National Institute of Standards and Technology NIST International Bureau of Weights and Measures BIPM Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Parts per notation amp oldid 1181948391 Thousand, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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