Dave0 Posted May 27, 2021 Posted May 27, 2021 Hi. Newbie. First post. I am hoping someone can clear something up for me. If my stock is in w/v i.e. 100 ug/ml do I have to take my aliquot in the same unit/form i.e. w/v? What happens if I did an aliquot by volume with a pippette and then made it up the desired volume. That would be v/v. Do I have to apply a conversion? Please help. Dave.
studiot Posted May 27, 2021 Posted May 27, 2021 45 minutes ago, Dave0 said: Hi. Newbie. First post. I am hoping someone can clear something up for me. If my stock is in w/v i.e. 100 ug/ml do I have to take my aliquot in the same unit/form i.e. w/v? What happens if I did an aliquot by volume with a pippette and then made it up the desired volume. That would be v/v. Do I have to apply a conversion? Please help. Dave. So is this homework or practical work or what ? Unless you know the density of your solution, how would you measure it other than by volume, especially with a pipette ?
chenbeier Posted May 27, 2021 Posted May 27, 2021 Additionally a dilution will give every time the same unit. If Stock is mass/ volume the the dilution will also mass/ volume Example 1g/l diluted by 10 give 0,1 g/l If you have volume by volume then its again volume by volume. Example 1 ml/l dilute by 2 gives 0,5ml/l
Dave0 Posted May 27, 2021 Author Posted May 27, 2021 Hi Chaps. Thanks for that. I've got that squared off in my head now. I was over complicating it. Follow up question then. I am normally use to a stock solution expressing concentration as ug/mg and quoting its density. From which if I take a weighted aliquot (g) out of it I can convert that to ml by dividing it by the density. I have just received a cert for a stock solution that quotes 1003ug/ml and also 997ug/g. So obviously this saves me the bother of the correction above because it is telling me from the off what is in it if I decide to do a aliquot by volume or mass anyway. It does fail to quote the density of the solution which I don't need but I was wondering if I can work it out based on the two concentrations?
studiot Posted May 27, 2021 Posted May 27, 2021 1 hour ago, Dave0 said: I have just received a cert for a stock solution that quotes 1003ug/ml and also 997ug/g. So obviously this saves me the bother of the correction above because it is telling me from the off what is in it if I decide to do a aliquot by volume or mass anyway. That will have implications for the density and actual dilution you make. You didn't answer my earlier questions to which I would add a request for more information on what this is all about. What is this solution and what is it for and what dilution regime are you intending to implement ?
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