Research Glossary

What is HPLC Purity in Research Peptides?

By Synedica Labs Research Team · 5 May 2026 · 5 min read

Quick takeaways

HPLC in 60 seconds

HPLC pushes a dissolved sample through a column packed with very fine particles. Different molecules travel at different speeds based on how strongly they interact with the column material. A detector at the end records each molecule as a peak on a graph called a chromatogram. The bigger and cleaner the main peak, the higher the purity.

What the percentage actually means

"99% HPLC purity" means the area under the main peak represents 99% of all detected material. The remaining 1% is everything else the detector saw — synthesis by-products, residual solvents, fragments. It is not a guarantee against contaminants the detector cannot see (which is why endotoxin testing matters separately).

Reported purityWhat that typically meansUse case
≥99%Strong reference-grade. Tight peak, very small impurity shoulders.Comparator arm, cross-batch reproducibility studies
98–98.9%Acceptable for general research use. Some detectable impurity peaks.Standard bench protocols, training runs
<98%Below the working floor most groups accept.Generally not used for serious comparative work
"99%+" with no chromatogramUnverifiable claim. Treat as missing data.Reject — request the chromatogram

Reading the chromatogram

A genuine HPLC chromatogram includes:

Common red flags

Where this fits in the bigger picture

HPLC purity is one part of a complete COA. The other components — observed mass, endotoxin, lab signature — are covered in our deeper guide: How to Read a Peptide COA. Together they form the evidence that the contents of the vial match the label.

A purity percentage without the underlying chromatogram is marketing copy, not evidence.
Where to go next

Related research reading

Full COA guide

HPLC purity in the context of a complete Certificate of Analysis.

FAQ

HPLC purity FAQ

Is 98% HPLC purity acceptable for research peptides?
Yes — 98% is the working floor most research groups accept. ≥99% is preferred for tighter comparative work where impurities could affect assay reproducibility.
Why does HPLC sometimes miss certain impurities?
HPLC only detects what the detector can see at the chosen wavelength. Salts, solvents and biological contaminants such as endotoxin require their own separate tests, which is why a complete COA includes more than HPLC alone.
What's the difference between HPLC purity and mass spec confirmation?
HPLC measures how pure the sample is. Mass spectrometry confirms whether the molecule present is actually the intended compound by checking its observed mass against the theoretical mass.

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