ISO/TC 147/SC 6/WG 3 - Preservation and handling of samples
Conservation et manipulation des échantillons
General Information
Frequently Asked Questions
ISO/TC 147/SC 6/WG 3 is a Subcommittee within the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). It is named "Preservation and handling of samples". This committee has published 5 standards.
ISO/TC 147/SC 6/WG 3 develops ISO standards. Currently, there are 5 published standards from this subcommittee.
The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) is an independent, non-governmental international organization that develops and publishes international standards. Founded in 1947 and headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, ISO brings together experts from 170+ member countries to share knowledge and develop voluntary, consensus-based standards that support innovation and provide solutions to global challenges.
A Subcommittee (SC) in ISO operates under a Technical Committee and focuses on a specific subset of the TC's scope. Subcommittees develop standards and technical specifications in their specialized area, reporting to their parent Technical Committee. They may also have working groups for detailed technical work.
The purpose of this document is to describe test plans and different operating methodologies of these test plans to define and verify the acceptable length of stability of a substance in a sample under specified conditions of preservation (temperature, matrix, light, addition of a stabilizer, where appropriate, type of preservation etc.) before starting analytical protocols (chemicals and physico-chemicals analysis). Biological and microbiological methods are excluded. It is necessary to have an analytical method with performances that have already been characterized (repeatability, intermediate precision, trueness, accuracy and uncertainty) in order to perform the stability study and implement its test plans.
- Technical specification55 pagesEnglish languagee-Library read for1 day
- Technical specification50 pagesEnglish languagesale 15% off
ISO 5667-15:2009 provides guidance on procedures for the preservation, handling and storage of samples of sewage and waterworks sludge, suspended matter, saltwater sediments and freshwater sediments, until chemical, physical, radiochemical and/or biological examination can be undertaken in the laboratory. The procedures in ISO 5667-15:2009 are only applicable to wet samples of sludge, sediment and suspended matter.
- Standard17 pagesEnglish languagesale 15% off
- Standard18 pagesFrench languagesale 15% off
This document specifies general requirements for sampling, preservation, handling, transport and storage of all water samples including those for biological analyses. It is not applicable to water samples intended for microbiological analyses as specified in ISO 19458, ecotoxicological assays, biological assays and passive sampling as specified in the scope of ISO 5667‑23. This document is particularly appropriate when spot or composite samples cannot be analysed on site and have to be transported to a laboratory for analysis.
- Standard52 pagesEnglish languagesale 15% off
- Standard46 pagesFrench languagesale 15% off
ISO 5667-3:2012 establishes general requirements for sampling, preservation, handling, transport and storage of all water samples including those for biological analyses. It is not applicable to water samples intended for microbiological analyses as specified in ISO 19458, ecotoxicological assays, biological assays, and passive sampling as specified in the scope of ISO 5667-23. ISO 5667-3:2012 is particularly appropriate when spot or composite samples cannot be analysed on site and have to be transported to a laboratory for analysis.
- Standard42 pagesEnglish languagesale 15% off
- Standard42 pagesEnglish languagesale 15% off
- Standard42 pagesFrench languagesale 15% off
- Standard12 pagesRussian languagesale 15% off
ISO 5667-3:2003 gives general guidelines on the precautions to be taken to preserve and transport all water samples including those for biological analyses but not those intended for microbiological analysis. These guidelines are particularly appropriate when spot or composite samples cannot be analysed on-site and have to be transported to a laboratory for analysis.
- Standard31 pagesEnglish languagesale 15% off
- Standard36 pagesFrench languagesale 15% off





