Dilutions AV
Dilutions AV
Dilutions AV
Introduction
Many of the laboratory procedures involve the use of dilutions. It is important to understand the concept of dilutions, since they are a handy tool used throughout all areas of the clinical/research laboratory. These dilutions have to be considered as they make a quantitative difference in what is going on.
Dilutions
If a 1/8 dilution of the stock solution is made followed by a 1/6 dilution what is the final dilution. The final dilution is: 1/8 x 1/6 = 1/48 These type of dilutions are trickier and not used very frequently in the lab.
Serial Dilutions
Dilutions can be made singly (as shown previously) or in series, in which case the original dilution is diluted further. A serial dilution is any dilution where the concentration decreases by the same quantity in each successive step. Serial dilutions are mutiplicative.
Doubling dilutions
Doubling dilutions are very popular. This is a series of dilutions. Each successive tube will the amount of the original concentrated solution. If this is done 6 times this is what you would end up with:
Dilution Factor
The dilution factor uses the formula volume/aliquot volume. EXAMPLE: What is the dilution factor if you add 0.1 mL aliquot of a specimen to 9.9 mL of diluent?
The final volume is equal to the aliquot volume PLUS the diluent volume: 0.1 mL + 9.9 mL = 10 mL The dilution factor is equal to the final volume divided by the aliquot volume: 10 mL/0.1 mL = 1:100 dilution
Practice
Problem: What is the dilution factor when 0.2 mL is added to 3.8 mL diluent?
Problem Continued
Remember that serial dilutions are always made by taking a set quantity of the initial dilution and adding it successively to tubes with the same volume. So each successive dilution would be multiplied by the dilution factor.
Problem Continued
So in the above problem all successive tubes would have 3.8 mLs of diluent. You would then transfer 0.2 of the initial diluted sample into the next tube, mix transfer 0.2, mix and so on. If you had 4 tubes what would be the final dilution of tube 4?
2 0.2 3.8
1/20x1/20 1:400
3 0.2 3.8
1/400x1/20 1:8000
4 0.2 3.8
1/8000x1/20 1:160,000
Applications
Biology: To determine concentrations of microscopic organisms or cells Comparison of two samples Dilute reagents for protocols/storage Medicine to determine microbial overload in a sample Test blood values of various components Homeopathy Core foundational practice
Applications
Calibration of instruments Standard curves