Diluting a sample by half is a 1:2 dilution. Can we be sure of this? Let's test it out. 200mls divided by 2 (the dilution factor) is 100mls
So with a dilution factor of 10 10 to the X power is equal to the starting concentration divided by the final concentration. In this case we will use 1 molar
500ml 200ml 100ml 50ml.
material to be diluted) + 4 unit volumes of the solvent medium (hence 1 + 4 = 5 = dilution factor). Example 1: To dilute a streptavidin solution 1:300.
100 ml of a water sample were filtered and then the filter was suspended in 10 ml of saline solution and shaked vigorously. What is the concentration factor?
dilution factor and so on until the final concentration is known. Example: A 5M solution of HCl is diluted 1/5. The resulting solution is diluted 1/10.
A log dilution is a tenfold dilution meaning the concentration is decreased by a multiple of ten. To complete a tenfold dilution
The dilution factors are: 2/5 10/1000 and 50/1000. The last one is not actually a dilution factor but is a conversion factor because we take 50 microliter but
07-Aug-2009 pathlength of the measurement and an extinction coefficient [1]. ... or RNA constant from Table 1 c. Multiply by the sample dilution factor.
If used for VOCs replace the Tygon portions with Teflon as much as possible