For Research Use Only · Not for Human Consumption

RESEARCH NOTE 02 — ON QUALITY

What ≥98% actually certifies

“Research grade” is a phrase anyone can print. A number on a batch-specific certificate is something else. Here is how to read the one we put on every lot.

The claim vs. the proof

Grade is a word; data is evidence

There is no regulator standing behind the term “research grade,” which is precisely why it deserves a second look. Used honestly, it means a compound made to a stated purity, confirmed by analytical testing, and shipped with enough documentation to actually use. Used as decoration, it means nothing at all. The dividing line is simple: did someone define a standard and then measure against it?

Ours is at least 98% by HPLC — no less than 98% of what is in the vial is the target compound, leaving under 2% for the usual synthesis residue: truncated chains, deletion sequences, leftover solvent.

The measurement

Reading the chromatogram

High-Performance Liquid Chromatography is how that number is earned. The sample is driven through a column under pressure; its components separate and leave the column at characteristic times, and the detector draws a trace — a chromatogram — of what came through and when.

One lot, one record

Why the batch number is the whole point

Every synthesis run is its own batch, with its own purity, its own impurity fingerprint, its own results. A certificate describes one of those runs — and only one. Borrowing a certificate from a different lot is not a shortcut; it is fiction.

A certificate reused across batches certifies nothing.

The habit that protects you is small: check that the lot number printed on your vial matches the lot number on the certificate. In our COA library the two are bound together by design.

The physical form

From solution to stable powder

Lyophilization — freeze-drying — is how a purified peptide solution becomes a dry, storable powder. Water is pulled off under vacuum at low temperature, leaving a cake that resists breakdown in storage and transit. Kept properly — generally −20 °C or below, dark and dry — a well-lyophilized peptide holds for a long time.

Done poorly, it betrays you quietly: material that won't dissolve cleanly, degrades early, or carries enough residual moisture to speed its own decay. Clear reconstitution and storage guidance is part of a serious supply.

A quick test

How to size up a supplier before you spend

You can learn most of what you need in the time it takes to open a product page. Three questions do the work:

  • Can you read the certificate before you buy — or is it gated behind an account or a purchase?
  • Is it specific to a batch, with an actual chromatogram, rather than a checked box on a generic sheet?
  • Are the same standards visible across the whole catalog, or only on the flagship items?

Past the documentation, weigh the small signals: are compounds named plainly instead of behind proprietary labels, and is it clear where synthesis happens? A serious supplier treats the paperwork as a deliverable. A vendor treats it as an afterthought.

FOR THE RECORD

These notes are background on the science and on how we document it — not instructions for use, and not claims about what any compound does in a living system. Everything Eternum supplies is Research Use Only: not a drug, supplement, or food, and not for human or animal use. Use these materials lawfully, in an appropriate research setting.

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