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ingredient science · · 4 دقيقة قراءة

HPLC vs UV Assay: What Buyers Should Know

Why the same extract can show two different percentages — and how to read the number on your specification.

لتقييم المكوّنات B2B فقط. يلخّص هذا المقال الأبحاث المنشورة وسياق السوق لقرارات التركيب والتوريد؛ وهو لا يشكّل ادعاءً صحياً أو ادعاءً بالوقاية من الأمراض أو علاجها موجَّهاً للمستهلك. تأكّد من الوضع التنظيمي لأي مكوّن وادعاء في سوقك المستهدف قبل الاستخدام.

Two ways to measure content

A standardization percentage is only meaningful with its method. The two most common assays for botanical extracts are HPLC and UV — and they don't always measure the same thing.

HPLC — a specific marker

High-Performance Liquid Chromatography separates and quantifies a specific marker compound (e.g. osthole, gingerol, luteolin). It answers: "how much of this exact molecule is in the extract?" Use it when your specification targets a single defined compound.

UV — a compound class

UV-Vis spectrophotometry measures a class of compounds that absorb at a wavelength (e.g. "total flavonoids" calculated against a reference). It answers: "how much of this family is present?" UV figures are typically higher than HPLC figures for the same material because they sum a group, not one molecule.

Why the number differs

A material can read "≥30% total polyphenols (UV)" and "1.5% A-type PACs (HPLC)" at the same time — both are correct, but they measure different things. Comparing a UV percentage from one supplier with an HPLC percentage from another is not an apples-to-apples comparison.

What to confirm

  • Which compound or class is measured.
  • Which method (HPLC or UV) produced the figure.
  • That your supplier and any competing quote use the same method before you compare.

To confirm the assay method behind a specification, request the specification sheet or COA.