Solution Dilution Calculator
Professional solution dilution calculator based on the C1V1 = C2V2 equation. Compute stock volume, final volume, or concentrations across molar, mass/volume, and percent units with instant, accessible results.
Full original guide (expanded)
Solution Dilution Calculator
Calculate dilution volumes to reach a target concentration from a stock solution.
Quickly compute accurate solution dilutions using the classical C1V1 = C2V2 equation. This professional tool serves chemists, biologists, and lab technicians who need to prepare solutions at a target concentration. It supports molar, mass/volume, and percent units, performs instant validation, and outputs a clear, step-by-step recipe.
Calculator
Results
Data Source and Methodology
Authoritative source: IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology (Gold Book), 2nd ed. (1997) — “dilution” (updated 2014). Direct link. All calculations apply the conservation-of-mass relationship for solutions.
Tutti i calcoli si basano rigorosamente sulle formule e sui dati forniti da questa fonte.
For additional background, see: D. C. Harris, “Quantitative Chemical Analysis,” 10th ed., W. H. Freeman (2020).
The Formula Explained
Primary equation (LaTeX): \( C_{1} \cdot V_{1} = C_{2} \cdot V_{2} \)
Solving for stock volume: \( V_{1} = \dfrac{C_{2} \cdot V_{2}}{C_{1}} \)
Diluent volume: \( V_{\text{diluent}} = V_{2} - V_{1} \)
Dilution factor: \( \mathrm{DF} = \dfrac{C_{1}}{C_{2}} \)
Units must be consistent in type for C1 and C2 (molar with molar, mass/volume with mass/volume, or the same percent basis).
Glossary of Variables
How It Works: A Step-by-Step Example
Scenario: Prepare 10 mL of 100 µM solution from a 10 mM stock.
- Enter C1 = 10 mM, C2 = 100 µM, V2 = 10 mL. Choose “Solve for V1”.
- Convert units internally to a common base (molar): 10 mM = 0.010 M; 100 µM = 0.0001 M.
- Apply the equation: \( V_{1} = \dfrac{C_{2} \cdot V_{2}}{C_{1}} = \dfrac{0.0001 \cdot 10\,\text{mL}}{0.010} = 0.1\,\text{mL} = 100\,\mu\text{L} \).
- Diluent volume: \( V_{2} - V_{1} = 10\,\text{mL} - 0.1\,\text{mL} = 9.9\,\text{mL} \).
- Recipe: Pipette 100 µL of stock, then add diluent to a final volume of 10 mL.
DF = C1/C2 = 10 mM / 0.1 mM = 100 → a 1:99 (stock:diluent) ratio.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Why must C1 and C2 have the same type of unit?
Because the equality C1×V1 = C2×V2 requires consistent dimensions. You may freely mix scales within a type (e.g., mM with µM), but not different physical bases (e.g., % v/v with % w/v).
Can this tool create a serial dilution?
This page focuses on single-step dilutions. For serial dilutions, repeat the calculation step-wise or use a dedicated serial-dilution workflow.
What precision should I use for pipetting?
Choose a pipette volume within its optimal operating range and round to practical increments. Always follow your lab’s SOPs.
How do I interpret the dilution factor (DF)?
DF = C1/C2. A DF of 50 means one part stock with 49 parts diluent (1:49). The tool also shows the exact stock:diluent ratio.
What if the computed V1 exceeds V2?
The requested C2 is higher than C1. Simple dilution cannot achieve this. Prepare a more concentrated stock or adjust your target.
Is percent w/v the same as mg/mL?
1% (w/v) is 1 g per 100 mL, equivalent to 10 mg/mL. However, this tool treats percent and mass/volume as separate types to prevent accidental unit mixing.
Do you support scientific notation?
Yes. You can enter numbers like 1e-3 or 2.5e2 in any numeric field.
Strumento sviluppato da Ugo Candido,. Contenuti verificati da,.
Ultima revisione per l'accuratezza in data: .
Formula (LaTeX) + variables + units
','
Primary equation (LaTeX): \( C_{1} \cdot V_{1} = C_{2} \cdot V_{2} \) Solving for stock volume: \( V_{1} = \dfrac{C_{2} \cdot V_{2}}{C_{1}} \) Diluent volume: \( V_{\text{diluent}} = V_{2} - V_{1} \) Dilution factor: \( \mathrm{DF} = \dfrac{C_{1}}{C_{2}} \)
- No variables provided in audit spec.
- Direct link — goldbook.iupac.org · Accessed 2026-01-19
https://goldbook.iupac.org/terms/view/D01706
Last code update: 2026-01-19
- Initial audit spec draft generated from HTML extraction (review required).
- Verify formulas match the calculator engine and convert any text-only formulas to LaTeX.
- Confirm sources are authoritative and relevant to the calculator methodology.
Solution Dilution Calculator
Calculate dilution volumes to reach a target concentration from a stock solution.
Quickly compute accurate solution dilutions using the classical C1V1 = C2V2 equation. This professional tool serves chemists, biologists, and lab technicians who need to prepare solutions at a target concentration. It supports molar, mass/volume, and percent units, performs instant validation, and outputs a clear, step-by-step recipe.
Calculator
Results
Data Source and Methodology
Authoritative source: IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology (Gold Book), 2nd ed. (1997) — “dilution” (updated 2014). Direct link. All calculations apply the conservation-of-mass relationship for solutions.
Tutti i calcoli si basano rigorosamente sulle formule e sui dati forniti da questa fonte.
For additional background, see: D. C. Harris, “Quantitative Chemical Analysis,” 10th ed., W. H. Freeman (2020).
The Formula Explained
Primary equation (LaTeX): \( C_{1} \cdot V_{1} = C_{2} \cdot V_{2} \)
Solving for stock volume: \( V_{1} = \dfrac{C_{2} \cdot V_{2}}{C_{1}} \)
Diluent volume: \( V_{\text{diluent}} = V_{2} - V_{1} \)
Dilution factor: \( \mathrm{DF} = \dfrac{C_{1}}{C_{2}} \)
Units must be consistent in type for C1 and C2 (molar with molar, mass/volume with mass/volume, or the same percent basis).
Glossary of Variables
How It Works: A Step-by-Step Example
Scenario: Prepare 10 mL of 100 µM solution from a 10 mM stock.
- Enter C1 = 10 mM, C2 = 100 µM, V2 = 10 mL. Choose “Solve for V1”.
- Convert units internally to a common base (molar): 10 mM = 0.010 M; 100 µM = 0.0001 M.
- Apply the equation: \( V_{1} = \dfrac{C_{2} \cdot V_{2}}{C_{1}} = \dfrac{0.0001 \cdot 10\,\text{mL}}{0.010} = 0.1\,\text{mL} = 100\,\mu\text{L} \).
- Diluent volume: \( V_{2} - V_{1} = 10\,\text{mL} - 0.1\,\text{mL} = 9.9\,\text{mL} \).
- Recipe: Pipette 100 µL of stock, then add diluent to a final volume of 10 mL.
DF = C1/C2 = 10 mM / 0.1 mM = 100 → a 1:99 (stock:diluent) ratio.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Why must C1 and C2 have the same type of unit?
Because the equality C1×V1 = C2×V2 requires consistent dimensions. You may freely mix scales within a type (e.g., mM with µM), but not different physical bases (e.g., % v/v with % w/v).
Can this tool create a serial dilution?
This page focuses on single-step dilutions. For serial dilutions, repeat the calculation step-wise or use a dedicated serial-dilution workflow.
What precision should I use for pipetting?
Choose a pipette volume within its optimal operating range and round to practical increments. Always follow your lab’s SOPs.
How do I interpret the dilution factor (DF)?
DF = C1/C2. A DF of 50 means one part stock with 49 parts diluent (1:49). The tool also shows the exact stock:diluent ratio.
What if the computed V1 exceeds V2?
The requested C2 is higher than C1. Simple dilution cannot achieve this. Prepare a more concentrated stock or adjust your target.
Is percent w/v the same as mg/mL?
1% (w/v) is 1 g per 100 mL, equivalent to 10 mg/mL. However, this tool treats percent and mass/volume as separate types to prevent accidental unit mixing.
Do you support scientific notation?
Yes. You can enter numbers like 1e-3 or 2.5e2 in any numeric field.
Strumento sviluppato da Ugo Candido,. Contenuti verificati da,.
Ultima revisione per l'accuratezza in data: .
Formula (LaTeX) + variables + units
','
Primary equation (LaTeX): \( C_{1} \cdot V_{1} = C_{2} \cdot V_{2} \) Solving for stock volume: \( V_{1} = \dfrac{C_{2} \cdot V_{2}}{C_{1}} \) Diluent volume: \( V_{\text{diluent}} = V_{2} - V_{1} \) Dilution factor: \( \mathrm{DF} = \dfrac{C_{1}}{C_{2}} \)
- No variables provided in audit spec.
- Direct link — goldbook.iupac.org · Accessed 2026-01-19
https://goldbook.iupac.org/terms/view/D01706
Last code update: 2026-01-19
- Initial audit spec draft generated from HTML extraction (review required).
- Verify formulas match the calculator engine and convert any text-only formulas to LaTeX.
- Confirm sources are authoritative and relevant to the calculator methodology.
Solution Dilution Calculator
Calculate dilution volumes to reach a target concentration from a stock solution.
Quickly compute accurate solution dilutions using the classical C1V1 = C2V2 equation. This professional tool serves chemists, biologists, and lab technicians who need to prepare solutions at a target concentration. It supports molar, mass/volume, and percent units, performs instant validation, and outputs a clear, step-by-step recipe.
Calculator
Results
Data Source and Methodology
Authoritative source: IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology (Gold Book), 2nd ed. (1997) — “dilution” (updated 2014). Direct link. All calculations apply the conservation-of-mass relationship for solutions.
Tutti i calcoli si basano rigorosamente sulle formule e sui dati forniti da questa fonte.
For additional background, see: D. C. Harris, “Quantitative Chemical Analysis,” 10th ed., W. H. Freeman (2020).
The Formula Explained
Primary equation (LaTeX): \( C_{1} \cdot V_{1} = C_{2} \cdot V_{2} \)
Solving for stock volume: \( V_{1} = \dfrac{C_{2} \cdot V_{2}}{C_{1}} \)
Diluent volume: \( V_{\text{diluent}} = V_{2} - V_{1} \)
Dilution factor: \( \mathrm{DF} = \dfrac{C_{1}}{C_{2}} \)
Units must be consistent in type for C1 and C2 (molar with molar, mass/volume with mass/volume, or the same percent basis).
Glossary of Variables
How It Works: A Step-by-Step Example
Scenario: Prepare 10 mL of 100 µM solution from a 10 mM stock.
- Enter C1 = 10 mM, C2 = 100 µM, V2 = 10 mL. Choose “Solve for V1”.
- Convert units internally to a common base (molar): 10 mM = 0.010 M; 100 µM = 0.0001 M.
- Apply the equation: \( V_{1} = \dfrac{C_{2} \cdot V_{2}}{C_{1}} = \dfrac{0.0001 \cdot 10\,\text{mL}}{0.010} = 0.1\,\text{mL} = 100\,\mu\text{L} \).
- Diluent volume: \( V_{2} - V_{1} = 10\,\text{mL} - 0.1\,\text{mL} = 9.9\,\text{mL} \).
- Recipe: Pipette 100 µL of stock, then add diluent to a final volume of 10 mL.
DF = C1/C2 = 10 mM / 0.1 mM = 100 → a 1:99 (stock:diluent) ratio.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Why must C1 and C2 have the same type of unit?
Because the equality C1×V1 = C2×V2 requires consistent dimensions. You may freely mix scales within a type (e.g., mM with µM), but not different physical bases (e.g., % v/v with % w/v).
Can this tool create a serial dilution?
This page focuses on single-step dilutions. For serial dilutions, repeat the calculation step-wise or use a dedicated serial-dilution workflow.
What precision should I use for pipetting?
Choose a pipette volume within its optimal operating range and round to practical increments. Always follow your lab’s SOPs.
How do I interpret the dilution factor (DF)?
DF = C1/C2. A DF of 50 means one part stock with 49 parts diluent (1:49). The tool also shows the exact stock:diluent ratio.
What if the computed V1 exceeds V2?
The requested C2 is higher than C1. Simple dilution cannot achieve this. Prepare a more concentrated stock or adjust your target.
Is percent w/v the same as mg/mL?
1% (w/v) is 1 g per 100 mL, equivalent to 10 mg/mL. However, this tool treats percent and mass/volume as separate types to prevent accidental unit mixing.
Do you support scientific notation?
Yes. You can enter numbers like 1e-3 or 2.5e2 in any numeric field.
Strumento sviluppato da Ugo Candido,. Contenuti verificati da,.
Ultima revisione per l'accuratezza in data: .
Formula (LaTeX) + variables + units
','
Primary equation (LaTeX): \( C_{1} \cdot V_{1} = C_{2} \cdot V_{2} \) Solving for stock volume: \( V_{1} = \dfrac{C_{2} \cdot V_{2}}{C_{1}} \) Diluent volume: \( V_{\text{diluent}} = V_{2} - V_{1} \) Dilution factor: \( \mathrm{DF} = \dfrac{C_{1}}{C_{2}} \)
- No variables provided in audit spec.
- Direct link — goldbook.iupac.org · Accessed 2026-01-19
https://goldbook.iupac.org/terms/view/D01706
Last code update: 2026-01-19
- Initial audit spec draft generated from HTML extraction (review required).
- Verify formulas match the calculator engine and convert any text-only formulas to LaTeX.
- Confirm sources are authoritative and relevant to the calculator methodology.