Waters has introduced the Patrol UPLC laboratory analyser, which is designed to meet the needs of process development laboratories for real-time quality analytical data.
Built on Waters' Ultraperformance LC (UPLC) technology, the new system provides scientists with mission-critical analytical data to guide decision making at the earliest stages of manufacturing process development.
With the introduction of the Waters Patrol UPLC laboratory analyser, scientists can now deploy Real-Time LC in an automated manner for process-related data acquisition and decision making on two new fronts: on the manufacturing floor with the Patrol UPLC process analyser and in the process development laboratory.
Craig Dobbs, programme manager for the Process Analytics division, said: 'The path to better process management and lower-cost manufacturing passes through the process development laboratory.
'UPLC technology has proven itself over the past eight years in discovery, research and development labs with its superior ability to detect and quantify components of complex reaction mixtures and fully characterise a candidate molecule by LC, LC/MS and LC/MS/MS.
'For the first time, the process development lab enabled by the Patrol UPLC laboratory analyser can leverage this historical QbD characterisation data for direct design space development, guiding decisions to optimise the chemical synthesis process by monitoring CQAs through scale-up and pilot production to full-scale manufacturing,' he added.
Designed and engineered to perform lab- to pilot-scale online and at-line reaction monitoring in the process development laboratory, the Patrol UPLC laboratory analyser system provides accurate, reproducible and precise chemical reaction mapping across the entire time course of the process.
With Real-Time LC and LC/MS information, scientists are able to fully characterise reaction kinetics and determine which process produces the desired endpoint.
A hallmark of the system is its dilution accuracy, linearity and range.
The technology behind this performance is the instrument's new Process Sample Manager (PSM), which automatically extracts an online sample from a reactor or slipstream and performs sample prep and sample injection - a process that once required the time and full attention of an analytical technician.
In addition to online samples, the PSM can accept and store up to 32 barcode-labelled vials, which can be a combination of different standards, controls and at-line samples.