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- Posts: 34
- Joined: Thu Jul 12, 2007 3:29 pm
As far as we can see, the ChemStation system is fine, if all you intend to do is simple one peak assays. Anything more than that and it really does struggle. Take for example the quantification of multiple impurities or degradation products in a pharmaceutical product.
There is no way to quantify them!!
The problems seem to be as follows:
1) In a dual assay/degs method. The most common approach is to quantify the imps against the main band assay peak. This is all well and good if all the imps have the same response factor. But how often is this true?? ChemStation can not assign individual response factors to individual peaks unless they are entered into the calibration table. This leads onto..
2) If the imps are entered into the calibration table, then any impurities in sample injections are quantified against the impurity peaks that may be present in the standard injections, rather than being quantified from the main band as desired. This also leads onto...
3) The only way to actually name the peaks (apart from going into each individual chromatogram) is to name them in the calibration table.
4) And if you are unfortunate to have dual actives, then you really do have problems!
This really is a vicious circle. The worrying thing is, that from recent training training with Agilent. They don't seem to know how to get around this.
Surely this is a basic requirement! Its such a shame that Agilent Hardware is of such a high standard, but is only let down with a legacy product such as ChemStation. This is only one of many limitations we have discovered using ChemStation...but I don't want to go on for ever!
Having said all this...I'm hoping that I'm completely wrong and someone out there perhaps has an answer?