While NGS and microscopy get the headlines, chromatography and spectroscopy quietly do the heavy lifting. The life science & analytical instruments market research study shows that chromatography is the second‑largest segment, and spectroscopy is not far behind. Why? Because every drug, every chemical, and every biological sample needs to be purified and analysed.
What's new? High‑performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and mass spectrometry (MS) are now coupled together (LC‑MS) to provide both separation and identification. The life science & analytical instruments market trends highlight that the fastest‑growing application is research, as academic and industrial labs use these techniques for metabolomics, proteomics, and environmental testing.
But these instruments are expensive and require skilled operators. That's why many labs share core facilities. Also, new benchtop models are making them more accessible to smaller labs.
The bottom line: if you work in pharma or biotech, you live by HPLC. It's not glamorous, but it's essential. And if you're a student, learning these techniques will make you highly employable.