HPLC vs. Mass Spectrometry: What Peptide Purity Testing Means
HPLC measures how pure a peptide sample is; mass spectrometry confirms its identity. Learn why research peptides are tested with both, and what a 99%+ purity result actually tells you.
# HPLC vs. Mass Spectrometry: What Peptide Purity Testing Means
Short answer: They answer two different questions. HPLC tells you how pure a sample is (what percentage is the target compound vs. impurities). Mass spectrometry tells you what the compound is (confirming its molecular weight and identity). Reputable research peptides are tested with both because purity without identity — or identity without purity — is only half the picture.
> TL;DR — HPLC = "how much of this is the real thing?" (purity %). Mass spec = "is this actually the right molecule?" (identity). You want both on a COA.
HPLC — the purity test High-Performance Liquid Chromatography pushes a dissolved sample through a column that separates its components based on how they interact with the column material. Each component appears as a peak:
- The target peptide shows up as the dominant peak.
- Impurities show as smaller peaks.
- The area of the main peak relative to the total gives the purity percentage — e.g., 99% means 99% of the sample is the target peptide.
A clean chromatogram with one tall peak and minimal small peaks indicates a high-purity product.
Mass spectrometry — the identity test Mass spectrometry (MS) measures the mass-to-charge ratio of the molecule, which reveals its molecular weight. Because each peptide has a known, specific molecular weight, MS confirms that the compound is exactly what it's supposed to be — not a different or mislabeled molecule.
HPLC alone can't do this: a sample could be 99% pure but still be the wrong compound. MS closes that gap.
Why both together - HPLC without MS: you know it's pure, but not *what* it is. - MS without HPLC: you know what it is, but not how much impurity is present. - Both: you know the sample is the correct compound and highly pure — which is why quality research peptides report both on their Certificate of Analysis.
What "99%+ purity, HPLC & mass-spec verified" actually means It means an independent lab ran HPLC and found ≥99% of the sample was the target peptide, and ran mass spec to confirm the molecule's identity matched the expected molecular weight — for that specific batch. Learn how to read those results in our Certificate of Analysis guide.
Every Dynamite Research Peptides compound is verified by HPLC and mass spectrometry, with a batch COA. For in-vitro laboratory research use only — not for human or animal consumption.
Researching this compound? See where to buy research peptides — what to look for in third-party testing, purity, and a Certificate of Analysis.
For research and educational use only. Not medical advice. Compounds discussed are for laboratory research use only and are not for human or veterinary consumption.