Mar 1, 2026 at 6:28 AM#6
OK, real world translation for those of us who aren't analytical chemists:
When comparing COAs from different labs, you cannot directly compare purity numbers unless the methods are similar.
What constitutes a "good enough" method on a COA?
- Detection at 214-220nm (not just 280nm)
- Column at least 100mm long
- Gradient elution (not isocratic)
- Run time at least 15 minutes (shorter runs sacrifice resolution)
When a purity number might be misleading:
- "99.5% by HPLC" with no method details → unverifiable
- Purity at 280nm only → might be missing impurities
- Very short run time (<10 min) on HPLC → likely missing peaks
- Isocratic method → limited separation capability
Bottom line for consumers: A 97% purity result from a thorough UPLC analysis is more trustworthy than a 99.5% result from a quick HPLC screen. Don't chase the highest number — evaluate the quality of the analysis behind it.
32 18mona_PHX, andrew_nyc, Dr.EndoEP and 29 others
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