That glass of tap water? It's been tested for fluoride, chloride, nitrate, and sulfate — all using ion chromatography. The ion chromatography market report by MRFR shows that ion‑exchange chromatography is the largest technique, and the market is growing at 7.35% CAGR — from $2.49 billion to $5.43 billion by 2035. Why the steady rise? Because regulators are cracking down on pollutants, and labs need precise tools.
What's driving growth? Environmental testing is the largest application, but the pharmaceutical industry is the fastest‑growing. The ion chromatography market analysis highlights that North America is the largest region, but Asia‑Pacific is the fastest‑growing — as China and India invest in water quality monitoring.
What's new? Portable ion chromatography systems that can be used in the field, not just in a lab. Also, hyphenated techniques (IC‑MS) that identify unknown ions at trace levels.
The bottom line: ion chromatography is not glamorous, but it's essential. Without it, your drinking water might contain arsenic, and your medicine might have toxic impurities. It's the quiet guardian of public health.