Jul 17, 2025 at 7:59 PM#1
I've been seeing COAs that report results using either HPLC or UPLC, and I want to understand whether the method matters for interpreting peptide purity results. This gets technical, but stick with me — it's important for comparing results across different labs.
HPLC (High Performance Liquid Chromatography):
- Standard analytical workhorse since the 1970s
- Column particle size: typically 3-5 μm
- Operating pressure: up to ~6,000 PSI
- Run time for semaglutide: typically 25-40 minutes
- Detection: UV at 220nm or 280nm
UPLC (Ultra Performance Liquid Chromatography):
- Newer technology (Waters coined the term, launched in 2004)
- Column particle size: sub-2 μm (typically 1.7 μm)
- Operating pressure: up to ~15,000-20,000 PSI
- Run time for semaglutide: typically 8-15 minutes
- Detection: same UV, but with faster detector sampling rates
The key difference: UPLC uses smaller particles in the column, which provides higher chromatographic efficiency — meaning sharper peaks and better separation of closely related compounds. In practical terms, UPLC can resolve impurities that HPLC might miss because they co-elute (come out at the same time) with the main peak.
Why does this matter?
A semaglutide sample tested by HPLC might show 99.2% purity, while the same sample tested by UPLC might show 97.8% purity — not because the sample changed, but because UPLC resolved an impurity peak that was hidden under the main peak in the HPLC analysis.
So when comparing COAs from different labs, knowing the method matters. Higher purity numbers aren't always "better" — they might just mean lower chromatographic resolution.
Has anyone done head-to-head comparisons? I'd love to see data.
44 7PharmD_Rodriguez, julia.endo, JessicaM_2024 and 41 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report