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Reading a Certificate of Analysis

Quality

Reading a Certificate of Analysis

Learning Center / 7 min read
For Research Use Only. Not for human or animal consumption.

What a COA is

A Certificate of Analysis is a batch-level quality document. It summarizes tests performed on a specific lot and gives reviewers a structured way to compare identity, purity, appearance, and other release data against expected specifications.

A COA should be read as part of a broader procurement and receiving record. It does not replace internal review, inventory controls, or project-specific acceptance criteria.

Core identifiers

Start with the identifiers: product name, SKU if provided, lot or batch number, manufacture or test date, and the issuing laboratory or quality group. These identifiers should match the label, packing record, purchase record, and internal inventory entry.

If any identifier is missing or inconsistent, request clarification before the material is routed into a laboratory workflow.

Identity and purity sections

Identity testing confirms that the analytical signal is consistent with the expected material. Purity testing estimates the proportion of the primary analytical peak relative to detected impurities under the stated method.

Review the method name, result, specification, and any notes about the instrument or reference standard. Results should be interpreted within the limits of the method used.

Document review checklist

A practical review checks that the document is legible, tied to the correct lot, dated, and consistent with the product received. It should also be stored with purchase records and receiving notes so it can be retrieved later.

If a direct COA is not available in the library, contact support with the product name, SKU, and lot or order reference.

When to ask questions

Ask for support when a COA has missing identifiers, unclear units, an unexpected method, or a mismatch with the product label. Clear documentation is part of responsible research procurement.

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