Lambda (written λ, in lowercase) is a non-
SI unit of
volume equal to 10−9m3, 1 cubic millimetre (mm3) or 1 microlitre (μL). Introduced by the
BIPM in 1880,[1] the lambda has been used in chemistry[2] and in law for measuring volume, but its use is not recommended.[3]
This use of λ parallels the pre-SI use of μ on its own for a
micrometre and γ for a
microgram.[4][5] Although the use of λ is deprecated, some clinical laboratories continue to use it.[6] The standard abbreviation μL for a microlitre has the disadvantage that it can be misread as mL (a unit 1000 times larger). In pharmaceutical use, no abbreviation for a microlitre is considered safe. The recommended practice is to write "microlitre" in full.[7]
References
^Donald Fenna (2002), A Dictionary of Weights, Measures, and Units, Oxford University Press,
ISBN0198605226,
p. 153.
^"Units: L". University of North Carolina. Retrieved 2015-03-28.
^Carl A. Burtis and David E. BrunsTietz (2014), Fundamentals of Clinical Chemistry and Molecular Diagnostics, 7th ed., Elsevier Health Sciences,
ISBN0323292062,
p. 114.
^Lela Buckingham (2014), Fundamental Laboratory Mathematics: Required Calculations for the Medical Laboratory Professional, F. A. Davis,
ISBN0803641028,
p. 48.
^I. P. Alimarin and M. N. Petrikova (2013), Inorganic Ultramicroanalysis, Elsevier,
ISBN1483150488,
p. xiv.
^Barbara H. Estridge, Anna P. Reynolds, and Norma J. Walters (2000), Basic Medical Laboratory Techniques, 4th ed., Cengage Learning,
ISBN0766812065,
p. 32.
^Chris Langley and Yvonne Perrie (2014), Maths Skills for Pharmacy: Unlocking Pharmaceutical Calculations, Oxford University Press,
ISBN019968071X,
p. 55.