Hi Tehol-
Welcome to JMP!
The Custom DOE platform is a great place to start for a DOE and is appropriate for the experiment you described. Here are a few comments/observations:
1) It appears the Polarity factor is continuous, but the values do not seem quite right. Typically, the centerpoint value of a continuous factor should be halfway between the min and max values. In this case, you have a minimum of 2 and maximum of 38, so the midpoint is 20 (but "7" appears in the table). If the polarity values are due to the choice of a different solvent, you might consider making "Solvent" a categorical factor. You can do this in the Custom DOE platform, but when you add the factor, select Categorical and designate how many levels in the factor (2 for two solvents, 3 for three solvents, etc.).
2) Based on the fairly wide factor settings, this appears to be a screening DOE where you might be trying to uncover main effects. You have enough experiments here to start looking at interactions and polynomial terms, however, which might be more appropriate for an optimization DOE. The only downside to this is that you may be running more experiments than you need to initially run, especially if you are exploring factor settings that you typically do not run or do not have much historical support.
3) On a practical note, if there is a way to avoid the covariate factor this would simplify the experiment (by drying the solvents, using single batches where the water content does not vary over time, etc.). If the covariate factors are unavoidable, I suggest you read this excellent blog post on covariate factors in the JMP DOE platform:
https://community.jmp.com/t5/JMP-Blog/What-is-a-covariate-in-design-of-experiments/ba-p/361517
I hope this helps and good luck with the DOE. Would love to see the results after you run the experiments!
-Scott
-Scott