Chemistry - Total Hydrocarbon (THC) - method validation
Validation failures discovered after expensive testing waste resources and delay projects, making upfront method validation essential for avoiding costly surprises during product development. Method validation for hydrocarbon analysis ensures accurate quantification despite potential interference from polymer additives, plasticizers, or other extractables that could mask or mimic petroleum contamination. Following ISO 10993-12 and ISO 9377-2 requirements, validation uses hydrocarbon reference standards to demonstrate recovery from specific materials while confirming that hexane extraction doesn't dissolve device components creating false-positive results. The validation process optimizes extraction parameters for device materials - duration, temperature, and solvent volume - balancing complete hydrocarbon recovery against material compatibility that prevents polymer dissolution artificially elevating results. For multi-component devices, validation confirms that all materials tolerate hexane exposure without degradation while still releasing trapped hydrocarbons from manufacturing processes. The GC-MS method validation establishes chromatographic conditions that separate hydrocarbon peaks from interfering substances, enabling accurate quantification even in complex matrices containing multiple organic species. Recovery studies across expected contamination range demonstrate method linearity and establish detection limits appropriate for cleanliness specifications, ensuring sensitivity adequate for biocompatibility risk assessment. The validation prevents false conclusions about contamination levels that could lead to either unnecessary process changes based on method artifacts or dangerous underestimation of actual hydrocarbon contamination threatening biocompatibility.