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Quality Assurance

Understanding HPLC Testing: What It Means for Peptide Purity

HPLC testing is the gold standard for verifying peptide purity and identity. Here is what researchers should know about reading and interpreting results.

March 8, 20265 min read
QU

High-Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) is the most widely used analytical method for determining peptide purity. It separates compounds in a mixture based on their chemical properties, allowing precise identification and quantification.

When a Certificate of Analysis shows 99% purity via HPLC, it means that 99% of the material in the sample is the target compound, with only 1% or less consisting of related impurities or byproducts.

Key things to look for on a COA

A quality COA should include the HPLC method used, retention time, purity percentage, and batch number for traceability.

  • Purity percentage should be 98% or higher for research-grade compounds.
  • Retention time helps confirm compound identity.
  • Batch numbers allow you to trace the specific production run.

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