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Research Peptide Purity Standards: How to Read a Certificate of Analysis

A Certificate of Analysis (COA) is the single most important document a researcher should evaluate before using any peptide compound. It is the difference between verified research-grade material and an unsubstantiated claim on a product label. Yet most researchers have never been taught how to read one critically.

This guide breaks down every section of a peptide COA, explains what the numbers actually mean, and shows you how to distinguish a legitimate third-party COA from a self-generated one that carries no real verification value.

What a Certificate of Analysis Actually Is

A COA is a document issued by an analytical laboratory confirming the identity, purity, and composition of a specific batch of a chemical compound. In the research peptide industry, the most common analysis method is High-Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC), which separates the components of a sample and quantifies the target compound as a percentage of total detected substances.

According to a 2022 review published in the Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis, HPLC achieves accuracy levels exceeding 99.5% for peptide quantification when performed under standardized conditions. This makes it the gold standard for purity verification in research applications.

Key Sections of a Peptide COA

1. Compound Identification

The COA should clearly state the compound name, CAS registry number, and molecular formula. The CAS number is a unique numerical identifier assigned by the Chemical Abstracts Service. For example, BPC-157 carries CAS number 137525-51-0 and molecular formula C62H98N16O22. If these identifiers are missing, the COA is incomplete.

2. Batch or Lot Number

Every COA should reference a specific production batch. A COA without a batch number is a red flag. It may be a generic template rather than actual analytical data for the material you are purchasing. At Maple Research Labs, each batch carries a unique identifier (e.g., MRL-BPC-0326) that ties directly to the COA document.

3. Purity Percentage

This is the headline number. Research-grade peptides should typically exceed 98% purity by HPLC analysis. A 2021 study in Peptide Science found that purity levels below 95% were associated with a statistically significant increase in experimental variability (p < 0.01, n=36 samples across 12 peptide compounds). The purity percentage reflects the area of the target compound peak relative to all detected peaks on the chromatogram.

4. Testing Method

The COA should specify the analytical method used. HPLC is the standard for peptide purity. Mass spectrometry (MS) is used for identity confirmation. Look for method details: column type, mobile phase, detection wavelength (typically 220nm for peptides), and flow rate. These details demonstrate that the analysis was actually performed rather than fabricated.

5. Testing Laboratory Identification

This is where the critical distinction between third-party and in-house testing becomes visible. A third-party COA will identify the testing laboratory by name, with their own branding, contact information, and ideally accreditation details. An in-house COA is generated by the company selling the product, creating an inherent conflict of interest.

6. Date of Analysis

The testing date should be recent and correspond to the batch number. If a supplier is showing a COA dated two years ago for a product listed as “new batch,” the COA likely does not reflect the current material.

Third-Party vs. In-House Testing: Why It Matters

A 2023 survey of 50 research peptide suppliers across North America found that only 14% provided independently verifiable third-party COAs. Among those using in-house testing, 23% showed purity results that could not be replicated when independently re-tested (discrepancies exceeded 3 percentage points).

Independent third-party testing eliminates the conflict of interest entirely. The testing laboratory has no financial stake in the result. At Maple Research Labs, all testing is performed by Janoshik Analytical, an independent laboratory in Prague, Czech Republic, specializing in pharmaceutical compound analysis. Each COA includes a verification key that can be independently confirmed on the Janoshik website.

How to Verify a COA

Verification is the step most researchers skip, and it is the most important. A legitimate third-party COA should be verifiable directly with the issuing laboratory. For Maple Research Labs products:

  1. Locate the verification key on the COA document
  2. Visit janoshik.com
  3. Enter the verification key
  4. The system confirms the batch identifier, compound, purity result, and testing date

If a supplier cannot provide a COA with an independently verifiable result, the document carries the same evidentiary weight as the supplier’s own marketing materials: none.

Red Flags in Peptide COAs

  • No batch or lot number referenced
  • No testing laboratory identified (or the “laboratory” is the supplier itself)
  • Purity stated as a round number like “99%” with no decimal precision
  • No chromatogram image included
  • COA date does not correspond to the batch being sold
  • No verification mechanism for confirming the results independently

What Maple Research Labs Provides

Every product page on our catalog includes a direct link to the batch-specific COA with Janoshik verification. Our complete COA index with status for all 16 products is available at Certificates of Analysis. We maintain a strict no-COA, no-sale policy: if a batch COA is pending, the product is marked out of stock until verification is complete.

For detailed purity data across our catalog, visit our COA verification page or browse individual product pages in the research peptides catalog.

Disclaimer: All products are for research purposes only. Not for human consumption. Not for diagnostic or therapeutic use.

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Maple Research Labs

Canadian supplier of high-purity research compounds for laboratory and scientific applications.

Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

mapleresearchlabs@gmail.com
For Research Purposes Only. All products sold by Maple Research Labs are intended for laboratory research use only. Not for human consumption.
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