Thank you for the responses, so from what I'm understanding, ~1400mg would be more than enough for any lab to easily discern the contents of said compound? (not including identifying specific herbal alkaloids, but rather just the plant origin of an extract, along with the other synthetic compounds)
If you have a specific target compound, and you know how to detect it then 1.4 g should be enough. "any lab" and "easily" are not so straightforward.
This begins to have the flavour of a dispute about lab performance, which brings up another "it depends"; are you buying or selling ?, are you the lab or the client ?, the boss or the analyst ?
Peter
I am neither- I'm actually in the process of designing a marketing campaign for a highly unique supplement product that has not yet been released, that uses a combination of both common and obscure ingredients. The effects are profound, and unlike anything currently on the market. The reason why I am asking, is that I have had investors ask to try a sample, then later requesting more or even entire bottles.
I know patents are useless in the supplement industry (add or take away an insignificant amt, or add an inert ingredient and its technically different), so I want to protect the formula prior to its release, so I have become hesitant about distributing further samples.
This is how my question came about- if someone with money liked my product, and wanted to take my idea and run with it, sending it off to san rafael labs, how much would they require to identify the contents...