
Pharmaceutical-Grade BAC Water | Houston, TX | HPLC-Tested | COA Every Order
What Is a Certificate of Analysis (COA)?
Why COAs Matter for Research Suppliers
When you purchase bacteriostatic water for research use, a COA is your primary evidence that the product meets its stated specifications. Without a COA, you have only the manufacturer’s claim — with no independent verification. A proper COA includes actual test results (not just “complies” checkboxes) with lot-specific data you can trace.
What a Complete COA Should Include
| Section | What to Look For |
|---|---|
| Product Identification | Product name, lot/batch number, manufacturing date, expiration date |
| HPLC Assay | Benzyl alcohol %: specification range AND actual measured value |
| Endotoxin (LAL) | Limit: <0.25 EU/mL — should show actual EU/mL value, not just “pass” |
| pH | Range: 4.5–7.0 — should show measured value |
| Sterility | Sterility test method (USP <71>) and result |
| Appearance | Clear, colorless, free from visible particulates |
Red Flags on a COA
- No lot number (cannot be traced to a specific production batch)
- Generic “Pass/Fail” results without actual measured values
- Missing endotoxin testing section
- No HPLC data for benzyl alcohol concentration
- COA shows a different product name or formulation than what was ordered
- No manufacturer name, contact information, or signature
Renew Lab Group COA — What You Receive
Every Renew Lab Group order ships with a batch-specific COA documenting lot number, HPLC benzyl alcohol assay (measured percentage), LAL endotoxin result, pH measurement, sterility confirmation, and manufacturing date. You can view a sample COA on our Certificate of Analysis page.
Related: How to Read a COA | What Is HPLC Testing? | Order with COA Included
