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- Posts: 26
- Joined: Mon Aug 04, 2008 2:24 pm
All the LC separation methods that we currently use call for 2 or 3 replicate injections of the test sample (3 replicates/same vial). It seems to me this is a waste of resources due to the superior performance of today's autosamplers and the fact that we run system suitability at the beginning of the run and every other 6 samples.
I brought this to the attention of our director and my plan was to do control charting to demonstrate that since the implementation of the method, the autosampler's precision has always been below 0.5%RSD (Specification for the method is NMT 2%) for the given compounds we analyze with that method, and only in very strange occasions you get a weird injection. All this with the intention to reduce the number of injections from 2 to a single injection.
My questions to everybody are the following:
1)How many replicates for a sample (per vial) do you usually do in your labs?
2)If you run one single injection, How do you determine when a given injection is outside the performance limits?
FYI, I work in a regulated environment (FDA) and thanks anyone for your input.














 
																							