Step 1: Identify the sample (solute) volume
This is the volume of the original solution you are diluting.
Step 2: Determine the total volume
Total volume = Sample volume + Diluent (e.g., water, saline)
Step 3: Apply the formula
DF = \frac{\text{Total Volume}}{\text{Sample Volume}}
Step 4: Express the result
Write as a ratio (e.g., 1:10, 1:100)
2. Practice Problems
Problem 1:
You mix 2 mL of sample with 8 mL of diluent.
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Total volume = 10 mL
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DF = 10 / 2 = 5
👉 Answer: 1:5 dilution
Problem 2:
You add 1 mL of serum to 99 mL of diluent.
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Total volume = 100 mL
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DF = 100 / 1 = 100
👉 Answer: 1:100 dilution
Problem 3:
You dilute 0.5 mL of sample with 4.5 mL of saline.
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Total volume = 5 mL
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DF = 5 / 0.5 = 10
👉 Answer: 1:10 dilution
Problem 4 (Serial Dilution):
You perform two consecutive 1:10 dilutions.
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First dilution = 1:10
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Second dilution = 1:10
👉 Overall DF = 10 × 10 = 100 (1:100)
3. Interpreting Results
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DF = 1: No dilution (original sample)
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Small DF (e.g., 1:2, 1:5): Slight dilution (still relatively concentrated)
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Large DF (e.g., 1:100, 1:1000): Highly diluted (very low concentration)
Key Interpretation Rule
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The higher the dilution factor, the lower the concentration of the final solution.
Clinical/Lab Insight
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If results are too high, dilute more (increase DF)
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If results are too low, dilute less
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Always multiply the final result by the DF to get the original concentration