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- Posts: 480
- Joined: Fri Sep 03, 2004 7:57 am
I have an odd problem with autosampler. A validated method was used to determine the released active substance in dissolution samples. On Tuesday the problem was not occurred. Next days, a series of injections from same vial gave great variability (%RSD not met the criteria – it was over 2.0%).
Different speed of syringe movement was tested and the problem did not move away.
Changing septum or without septum (the solvent was aqueous buffer solution without organics – so, we believed that the evaporation was minimum) was also cannot eliminate the trouble.
Then we checked the performance of autosampler and found nothing wrong.
We were back to system suitability test using standard solution and the problem came again.
I asked my analyst to increase injection volume from 20 μL to 30 μL. I assumed that greater injected sample may reduce variability, but I never predicted that the correction was very extreme: %RSD reduced to less than 1.0%! I am so amazed and do not know how to explain this phenomenon. Could anyone give me possible cause of the problem?
Note: Isopropanol was used as needle rinsing/washing solution.
Best regards,
SYX
