Molarity Calculator
Calculate molarity, required solute mass, final solution volume, or molecular weight for laboratory solution preparation using mass, volume, and molecular weight.
Calculator Inputs
Advanced Options
Results
Formula and Calculation Logic
Molarity describes the number of moles of solute per liter of final solution. This calculator converts all entered values into base units before calculating the result: grams for mass, liters for volume, and mol/L for molarity.
Where M is molarity in mol/L, n is moles of solute, and V is solution volume in liters.
The calculator uses molecular weight to convert between grams and moles, then displays the result in practical laboratory units.
When preparing a solution, adjust the final volume after the solute has dissolved. Do not simply add the final volume of solvent directly to the dry solute unless the protocol specifically allows it.
Example Workflow
A scientist needs to prepare 100 mL of a 500 mM NaCl stock solution for buffer preparation.
Enter Calculate Required Mass mode, then input 500 mM target molarity, 100 mL final volume, and 58.44 g/mol molecular weight.
The calculator determines that 2.922 g NaCl is required to prepare the solution.
Weigh the NaCl, dissolve below the final volume, bring to 100 mL, mix thoroughly, and label the solution.
Common Mistakes
Frequently Asked Questions
How do you calculate molarity?
Molarity is calculated as moles of solute divided by liters of final solution.
How do I calculate grams needed for a molar solution?
Use: mass = molarity × volume × molecular weight.
What is the difference between M, mM, µM, and nM?
M is mol/L. mM is 10⁻³ M, µM is 10⁻⁶ M, and nM is 10⁻⁹ M.
Why does molecular weight matter?
Molecular weight converts between grams and moles. Using the wrong value will produce incorrect concentrations or masses.
Should I include preparation overage?
Use overage when you expect pipetting loss, transfer loss, dead volume, or repeated handling.
Does this calculator account for solubility?
No. Verify experimentally that the reagent dissolves at the target concentration.
Related Calculators
These calculators are intended for research and educational workflows only. Always validate calculations, units, and experimental conditions before laboratory use.
