Serial Dilution Calculator

Compute per-step and cumulative dilution factors, final concentration, and a tube-by-tube concentration table.

Enter the starting concentration of your sample.

Per-step dilution factor

10

Total dilution factor

100,000

Final concentration

0 mg/mL

Each tube volume: 10 mL (aliquot + diluent).

Dilution Table

StepTubeCumulative factorConcentration (mg/mL)
1Tube 1100.1 mg/mL
2Tube 21000.01 mg/mL
3Tube 31,0000.001 mg/mL
4Tube 410,0000.0001 mg/mL
5Tube 5100,0000 mg/mL

How to Use This Calculator

1

Measure aliquot and diluent volumes

Decide how much sample and diluent you will use for each dilution step.

2

Enter starting concentration

Provide the initial sample concentration and specify the units for clarity.

3

Set the number of steps

The calculator applies the same dilution factor for each step and generates a complete table.

4

Review dilution table

Use the per-tube concentrations to plan assays, plating, or analytical measurements.

Formula

Dilution factor per step = (Vᵢ + V_d) / Vᵢ

Cₙ = C₀ / (factor)ⁿ

Vᵢ is the aliquot volume transferred each step, V_d is diluent volume, and n is the step number. C₀ is starting concentration.

Example

Using 1 mL aliquot + 9 mL diluent (factor = 10) for 4 steps gives concentrations C₀/10, C₀/100, C₀/1000, C₀/10000.

Full Description

Serial dilutions reduce concentration stepwise, often by the same factor, enabling measurement of analytes across wide dynamic ranges. This calculator automates the repetitive math and produces a dilution schedule for lab execution.

Use it for microbiology plating, ELISA standards, spectrophotometry, or any workflow requiring controlled successive dilutions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to discard volume between steps?

Yes. After mixing, remove the aliquot for the next tube. Residual volume remains in the previous tube.

Can steps have different factors?

This calculator assumes identical steps. For varied factors, compute each manually or run separate calculations.

How accurate are dilutions?

Accuracy depends on pipetting technique. Use calibrated pipettes and mix thoroughly at each step.

How do I convert concentrations to counts?

Use the final concentration to interpret assay results (e.g., multiply colony counts by dilution factor).

Can I copy the table?

Yes. Copy and paste the table into lab protocols or worksheets for quick reference.