What is an Impediment
An impediment is anything holding the team back. It's a very wide open category that can include things like:
- physical hardware limitations
- missing or poor tools
- personal conflicts
- missing skills on the team
- missing personal skills
- lack of influence or authority
- illness
- missing knowledge
We often focus on the obvious: tools and authority, but more often it's the intangible that holds a team back. Things like team cohesiveness, knowledge, and experience.
More realistic test data
Don't get caught up categorizing the improvement as internal vs impediment. Our goal is to embed improvement into the natural delivery process. For that reason, my first inclination would be to say all impediments and improvements should be done in the context of delivering. You want improvement to be reflected in the ability to deliver. We want our outcomes to reflect reality. Sometimes improvement efforts mean we temporarily lower velocity in the name of future increases. Sometimes we even permanently lower velocity in the name of quality.
I would suggest finding incremental ways you can get to your proposed end state and implement a little bit of it each time you touch that area, each sprint, and/or each time your prepare another test run (assuming it takes prep time - if not - fantastic!).
Improvements on Backlog
This is your choice and something you should discuss with your PO. Understand that while the PO wants high quality and improved output from sprints, the backlog is meant to represent valuable features/requirements from the user's perspective - not yours. For that reason, I would be hesitent to put improvement items on the backlog. You should ALWAYS be improving with each backlog item. Your PO may also balk at filling the backlog with things they feel should be done as part of normal delivery. Take it as a signal that this stuff is not directly valuable to the user, but a cost of delivering high quality value at a sustainable pace.