Dec 16, 2025 at 7:15 AM#1
Got my latest Janoshik results back and I realized a lot of people in this community don't actually know how to read an HPLC report. I work in analytical chemistry (pharma sector) so let me break this down.
What you'll see on a Janoshik HPLC report:
1. Chromatogram — the actual graph with peaks. X-axis is retention time (minutes), Y-axis is signal intensity (mAU)
2. Peak table — lists each detected peak, its retention time, area, and area %
3. Purity percentage — the main peak area as a % of total peak area
4. Identity confirmation — whether the main peak's retention time matches the reference standard
What "good" results look like for GLP-1 peptides:
- Purity ≥ 95% = excellent, pharmaceutical grade territory
- Purity 90-95% = acceptable for research peptides
- Purity 85-90% = borderline, I'd want to know what the impurities are
- Purity < 85% = return/discard, not worth the risk
The purity number is the single most important figure. But don't ignore the rest of the data. 📊
1 8Dr.PainCLE
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