Industry applications

Configured around your range, accuracy class, and approval region.

The same instrument family can mean different things in a pharmaceutical QC lab, a food authenticity program, a field monitoring team, or a university research facility. This page keeps those contexts separate so the first conversation starts closer to the real workflow.

HPLC method validation, balance qualification, sample-prep instruments, and pipetting workflows are selected with GMP and Annex 11 traceability in mind. The buying discussion often includes audit trails, certificate retrieval, electronic records, and how a method transfer will be explained across sites.

Residue, contaminant, and authenticity testing labs need instruments that connect HACCP controls, ISO 17025 evidence, and AOAC method references. Sartorius guidance keeps the sample matrix, throughput, cleaning routine, and tolerance target visible during selection.

Ambient, water, and soil analysis teams often report against EPA, EU 16000-series, or equivalent national rules. The practical challenge is matching portable or bench instruments to the documentation trail that regulators and internal reviewers expect.

Teaching and research labs need instruments that are easy to explain, cite, maintain, and share among changing users. Chromatography, microscopy, sample preparation, and weighing systems are reviewed with training clarity and documentation access in mind.

Sample-handling, balance, and analyte-quantification systems are reviewed against CLIA/CAP and IVDR documentation needs. Selection support focuses on repeatability, operator handover, traceable calibration, and the way records move between technical and clinical teams.

The list is intentionally concise, but the advisory work behind it is not shallow. For every industry, the core question is how a measurement becomes acceptable evidence. A food lab may prioritize throughput and method linkage, while a clinical team may focus on handover and traceable documentation. An environmental group may need portability without losing report quality, and a research lab may need a setup that remains teachable after personnel changes. Sartorius uses these differences to guide instrument families, accessories, service intervals, and certificate expectations before a quote is prepared.

Tell us which industry owns the result.

Include the approval framework, sample type, and measurement consequence so the shortlist reflects the environment where the instrument will actually be judged.

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