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How to actually read an HPLC purity report

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2mo ago

The COA thread people keep asking for. Reading an HPLC purity report, step by step:

  1. Find the main peak — that's your target compound.
  2. Read its area percent. That's the "purity %" everyone quotes.
  3. Look at the other peaks (impurities) and their percentages.
  4. Check the method block: column, mobile phase, wavelength. A purity number with no method behind it is just a number.

Biggest beginner trap: assuming a high purity % alone proves identity. It doesn't — that's what mass spec is for. More on that below.

6 replies
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New-U Staff ▲ 1 · New 1mo ago

Excellent breakdown. To reinforce step 5: purity answers "how much of this is the compound," identity (mass spec) answers "is this the compound at all." You need both. A 99% area-percent peak of the wrong molecule is still the wrong molecule.

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1mo ago

One practical add: glance at the peak shape, not just the number. A clean, symmetric main peak with flat baseline tells a different story than a high number sitting on a noisy, drifting baseline.

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1mo ago

This finally made area percent make sense to me. The "purity high but identity unproven" trap is exactly the thing I'd have fallen into. Bookmarked.

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1mo ago

And check the wavelength in the method. Reading purity off a detection wavelength that doesn't suit the compound can flatter or punish the number. Method block first, always.

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11d ago

Came here from the area-percent thread — this is the clearest explanation of a COA I've found anywhere. The "purity high but identity unproven" trap finally makes sense. Thank you for writing it.

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Moderator 10d ago

This thread does a lot of quiet heavy-lifting for new members — keeping it near the top on purpose. If you're new and reading this: the method block (column, mobile phase, wavelength) is the part people skip and shouldn't.

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