Where precision
is the standard.
At Aitrixa, we're driven by a simple belief: high quality shouldn't come with inflated price tags. We've built lasting partnerships with trusted suppliers, allowing us to deliver exceptional value without compromising on standards. Every product that leaves our facility undergoes rigorous quality control, ensuring consistency, purity, and reliability that our customers can count on. We exist to support the work that moves science and industry forward through dependable supply, transparent pricing, and a commitment to excellence in everything we do.
Built on two uncompromisable commitments.
An obsession with quality
Every compound we release is held to the same exacting standard — regardless of order size or urgency. Batches are characterised by HPLC and high-resolution mass spectrometry, and the raw instrument data ships with every order. If a lot doesn't meet specification, it doesn't leave our facility. There are no exceptions and no lower-grade alternatives.
Top-tier customer support
Our team includes chemists, not just account managers. When you have a technical question about a compound's behaviour, its characterisation data, or how it fits your assay, you reach someone who understands the science. We respond fast, speak plainly, and follow through — because your research depends on it.
A problem worth solving
Aitrixa was founded on a frustration shared by many researchers: reference standard quality was inconsistent, documentation was opaque, and sourcing felt like guesswork. Too often, compounds arrived without meaningful analytical data — just a purity figure and a lot number.
We set out to fix that. Every batch we release ships with instrument-generated chromatograms and spectra, not typeset summaries. The data is yours to scrutinise.
Rigour at every stage
Every compound in our catalogue follows a documented chain of custody from receipt through dispatch. Lots are tested by HPLC and confirmed by high-resolution mass spectrometry. Those that fall short of specification are destroyed — not sold at a lower grade, not held for review.