⚠ All responses are for research education only. Not medical advice.
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Quick Select — Known Compounds
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Gelling / Viscous
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Excipients, Lab Standards & COA Interpretation
Mannitol
Lyoprotectant / Bulking Agent
Mannitol is a sugar alcohol used as a bulking agent and lyoprotectant in lyophilized (freeze-dried) peptide vials. It is not pharmacologically active.
What it does:
What it does:
- Creates visible white cake in the vial
- Protects peptide structure during freeze-drying
- Makes the lyophilizate easier to handle and dissolve
Benzyl Alcohol
Bacteriostatic Preservative
Benzyl alcohol (0.9%) is the preservative in bacteriostatic water (BAW), the most common reconstitution solvent for peptides.
Standard range: 0.9% (pharmaceutical standard)
Function:
Standard range: 0.9% (pharmaceutical standard)
Function:
- Inhibits bacterial growth in multi-use vials
- Extends usability of reconstituted peptide
- Does not affect peptide activity at standard concentration
Acetic Acid
pH-Adjusting Solvent
Dilute acetic acid (0.1–1%) is used for compounds that require slightly acidic conditions to dissolve — primarily growth hormone fragments and some lipophilic peptides.
Compounds requiring AA:
Storage note: AA-reconstituted peptides may have shorter stability windows than BAW-reconstituted ones.
Compounds requiring AA:
- AOD-9604
- HGH Fragment 176-191
- Some GH-releasing peptides
Storage note: AA-reconstituted peptides may have shorter stability windows than BAW-reconstituted ones.
DMSO
Dimethyl Sulfoxide — High-Penetration Solvent
DMSO is a polar aprotic solvent used for highly lipophilic or poorly water-soluble research compounds.
Used for:
Used for:
- SLUPP-332
- Some SARMs
- Certain steroid-adjacent compounds
- DMSO rapidly penetrates skin — wear nitrile gloves
- Carries dissolved compounds transdermally
- Do not use with contaminated equipment
- Strong garlic-like odor is normal
Trehalose
Lyoprotectant / Cryoprotectant
Trehalose is a disaccharide used in high-quality lyophilized formulations to protect peptide tertiary structure during freezing and drying.
Significance on COA: Its presence indicates a more sophisticated manufacturing process. More protective than mannitol alone for sensitive peptides.
Reconstitution: No special handling required. Dissolves readily in BAW or sterile water. Slightly sweet if tasted (not relevant for research use).
Significance on COA: Its presence indicates a more sophisticated manufacturing process. More protective than mannitol alone for sensitive peptides.
Reconstitution: No special handling required. Dissolves readily in BAW or sterile water. Slightly sweet if tasted (not relevant for research use).
Polysorbate 80
Surfactant / Solubilizer
Used in some formulations to enhance solubility of poorly water-soluble peptides and prevent aggregation at the vial surface.
When you'll see it: More complex formulations, some GH peptides, and certain carrier-enhanced products.
⚠ Note: May cause foaming during reconstitution. Gentle swirling instead of vigorous mixing is essential when Polysorbate 80 is present. Foam does not indicate degradation.
When you'll see it: More complex formulations, some GH peptides, and certain carrier-enhanced products.
⚠ Note: May cause foaming during reconstitution. Gentle swirling instead of vigorous mixing is essential when Polysorbate 80 is present. Foam does not indicate degradation.
COA Interpretation Guide
What a legitimate Certificate of Analysis should show
Parameter
What to Look For
Purity (HPLC)
≥98% — anything below 95% is a red flag
Identity (MS)
Mass spec confirmation — must match theoretical MW
Testing Lab Name
Named, verifiable third-party lab required
Lot Number
Unique lot # matching your vial label
Purity 95–97%
Borderline — acceptable only with MS confirmation
No MS Confirmation
Identity unverified — cannot confirm compound is what it claims
Purity <95%
Do not use — significant impurity risk
No Lab Name / Generic
In-house COA — not independently verified
Round number purity (e.g. "99%")
Suspicious — legitimate HPLC reports decimal values (e.g. 98.7%)
Missing MW or Sequence
Incomplete documentation — request full COA
⚠ Reconstitution information is for research reference only. Not medical guidance.