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How to Accurately Measure Moisture Content Using a Moisture Analyser?

Moisture control is essential in food, feed and R&D labs. Whether checking raw materials, monitoring product stability, or validating formulations, accurate moisture analysis ensures quality, safety, and regulatory compliance.

The most efficient way to measure moisture accurately is with a moisture analyser. However, to obtain repeatable and trustworthy results, you must consider sample handling, drying protocols, instrument calibration, and the selection of an appropriate method.

What is a Moisture Analyser And How It Works?

A moisture analyser determines the moisture percentage by recording the weight loss as a sample is dried under controlled heating conditions. The principle is based on thermogravimetric analysis (TGA):

Moisture (%) = (Initial Weight – Final Weight) / Initial Weight × 100

Modern instruments feature halogen or IR heating elements for rapid and uniform heat distribution, real-time weight tracking, and programmable methods tailored to sample types.

Key FeaturesValue in Laboratory Use
Halogen HeatingFaster evaporation, stable temperature control
Real-Time Weight MonitoringDetects endpoint dynamically, avoids over-drying
Method StorageEnsures repeatability across routine batches
Temperature RangeTypically 30 -200°C, adjustable in 1 °C increments

These units are commonly used across QC, R&D, and formulation labs handling active materials, hygroscopic excipients, lyophilised drug products, and analytical standards.

Why Moisture Analysis Matters in Analytical Workflows?

If you’re preparing reference solutions, assay standards, or chromatographic mobile phases, even trace moisture can alter performance.

Use CaseMoisture Risk
Lyophilised APIsReduced potency during storage
Powder excipientsPoor flow and inconsistent dosing
HPLC sample preparationSolvent dilution inconsistency
GC volatile analysisInterference due to residual water

For regulated workflows, laboratories often require methods validated to USP/EP/ICH standards, especially when results are part of batch release specifications.

Calibration and Routine Verification

Moisture analysers must be regularly calibrated to avoid drift. Both the balance and heating module require verification.

Calibration AreaHow to CalibrateFrequency
Weighing SystemUsing E2/F1 class certified weightsWeekly or per SOP
Temperature ModuleUse a reference thermometer probe on the panMonthly or quarterly
Method ValidationRun known standards (e.g. Di-sodium tartrate)Post-maintenance or quarterly

For labs preparing documentation for audits or COA submissions, it is important to log calibration history. Instruments that allow auto-logging or printouts are useful in maintaining GMP/GLP compliance.

Common Issues

Operators should avoid assuming the analyser will compensate for poor prep. Even minor inconsistencies can cause outliers or failed method verification.

IssueImpactPreventive Action
Sample overloadIncomplete drying or heat gradientsStick to recommended weights (≤5 g)
Uneven spreadingEdge drying and centre retentionUse a spatula to flatten
Dirty or reused pansResidual mass errorUse new or thoroughly cleaned pans
Incorrect endpoint settingOver-drying or premature stopValidate the method across multiple trials

Drying should be observed during method development. The weight vs time curve should plateau without rehydration or mass fluctuation. Many newer units include visual displays of drying curve trends.

Selecting a Moisture Analyser Based on Laboratory Requirements

Different lab setups demand different capabilities from their moisture analyser. A small QC lab focused on excipient testing does not need the same profile storage or resolution as a formulation lab handling complex, multi-stage drying of biologics.

Below is a comparison matrix to guide technical selection:

Lab TypeEssential FeaturesRecommended Range
Basic QC (routine excipient testing)Single-temp drying, manual tare, basic LCDEntry-level, 0.01% readability
Formulation labProgrammable steps, higher precision balance0.001 g readability, halogen heater
Analytical prep (HPLC/GC support)Ramp profiles, custom ID tagging, and real-time plotting0.0001 g readability, software-linked
Stability studies and validationAudit trail, CFR 21 Part 11 compliance, auto-calRegulated model with backup log

For labs preparing HPLC vials, units must support programmable drying curves and quick logging of sample IDs for traceability. Moisture readings here must be tightly linked with solution standardisation and documentation trails for audit submission.

Moisture Analyser Use in HPLC and GC Sample Workflows

In chromatography, trace moisture can disrupt baseline and peak consistency, especially in GC vials where volatile analytes compete with residual water, causing ghost peaks or signal loss.

To prevent this:

  • Check lyophilised samples for moisture before reconstitution.

  • Ensure that solvents such as acetonitrile and methanol are dry and properly stored.

  • Scan freeze-dried standards with a moisture analyser before dilution.

  • Many labs include this in SOPs to maintain assay and stability accuracy over time.

Impact on Stability Studies and Batch Release

Moisture significantly affects product shelf life, particularly in semi-permeable packs or when hygroscopic materials are stored in amber vials. It can alter assay results over time.

Moisture analyser checkpoints are used in:

  • Stability studies (real-time & accelerated)

  • Packaging validation

  • Injectable pre-fill calibration

  • Granulation checks before tabletting

Results are logged with sample ID, timestamp, and method version under controlled conditions, using instruments with onboard or PC-linked data storage.

Maintenance and Cleaning

Moisture analysers require regular maintenance to prevent residue buildup, sensor drift, or pan warping. Wipe pans, run weekly blanks, clean chambers monthly, and adhere to part replacement schedules. Models like Borosil Scientific offer built-in alerts to reduce downtime.

Conclusion

Accurate moisture content determination is not just about what happens inside the analyser; upstream prep, drying protocols, and data consistency also shape it.

Moisture analysis plays a critical role from raw material evaluation to batch release. Investing in a programmable moisture analyser with built-in documentation tools, calibration traceability, and heating flexibility is essential for food, feed, pharmaceutical, analytical, and industrial workflows. With Borosil Scientific, you get precision backed by robust service support, validated performance, and a legacy of scientific trust.

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