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- Posts: 47
- Joined: Fri Sep 07, 2007 12:39 am
I am having a little trouble understanding how the USP has worked out the concentration of the Residual Solvent Standard Solutions.
My understanding is that for Procedures A and B, as documented in USP <467>, the standards would have been prepared at the limits. However when I calculate the concentrations for each residual solvent in the standard solutions (prepared using the USP Residual Solvents Mixtures) I get results which are approximately 1/5 of the limit; for example the limit for Acetonitrile is 410ppm, but the concentration of Acetonitrile in the standard is only 82ppm (i.e. 20%). The consequence of this is that if you analyse a sample, using procedure A, and obtain a peak which corresponds to a particular residual solvent; if that peak is larger than the standard peak it is not necessarily above the limit (it is only above 1/5 of the limit) but the USP still requires you to continue with the test procedure and quantify the peak. Is this correct?
Additionally this causes confusion when one wishes to utilise Procedure C. In the Standard Preparation for Procedure C it states that when preparing individual standards of interest that you should "...obtain solutions having a final concentration of 1/20 of the value stated in table 1 or 2 (under Concentration limit)..." Is the correct interpretation of this statement that you need to prepare standards at 5% of the concentration limit? For example if you wanted to quantify for Acetonitrile you would prepare a standard with a concentration of 21ppm?
This seems to make little sense as why would you wish to quantify with a standard that is so much smaller than the amount you suspect to be in the sample?
I really am struggling to see the logic in this and hoping that someone can shed some light on the matter.
If any clarification is needed for you to help me answer i will be more than happy to answer any questions about how i am calculating or preparing solutions etc.
Thanks
