Molecular Weight to Molarity
Convert weighed mass into molarity by using solution volume and molecular weight together.
The table uses a simple 1 liter and 100 g/mol reference example. The live converter above handles your actual volume and molecular-weight inputs.
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Molecular Weight to Molarity Table (1 L and 100 g/mol Example)
| Mass (g) | Volume (L) | Molecular Weight (g/mol) | Molarity (M) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 | 100 | 0.01 |
| 2 | 1 | 100 | 0.02 |
| 5 | 1 | 100 | 0.05 |
| 10 | 1 | 100 | 0.1 |
| 20 | 1 | 100 | 0.2 |
| 25 | 1 | 100 | 0.25 |
| 50 | 1 | 100 | 0.5 |
| 75 | 1 | 100 | 0.75 |
| 100 | 1 | 100 | 1 |
| 200 | 1 | 100 | 2 |
Popular Conversions
- 1 grams in 1 L at 100 g/mol = 0.01 M
- 5 grams in 1 L at 100 g/mol = 0.05 M
- 10 grams in 1 L at 100 g/mol = 0.1 M
- 20 grams in 1 L at 100 g/mol = 0.2 M
- 50 grams in 1 L at 100 g/mol = 0.5 M
- 100 grams in 1 L at 100 g/mol = 1 M
- 200 grams in 1 L at 100 g/mol = 2 M
- 250 grams in 1 L at 100 g/mol = 2.5 M
What is Molecular Weight and Molarity?
Molecular Weight
Definition: Molecular weight is commonly used to describe the mass associated with one mole of a molecular substance, usually in grams per mole in lab practice.
History/origin: Chemists long used formula weight and molecular weight to connect counted particles with measurable mass.
Current use: It is used when converting between grams, moles, molarity, and clinical concentration units.
Molarity
Definition: Molarity is the amount concentration of a solute, measured in moles per liter of solution.
History/origin: It became a standard concentration term for laboratory solution preparation and reporting.
Current use: Molarity is used in titrations, stock solutions, buffer preparation, and general chemistry calculations.
Related Concentration Conversions
These conversions help connect mole-based, mass-based, and ratio-style concentration formats.
| Related Conversion | Factor or Rule | Formula |
|---|---|---|
| MMol/L to mg/dL | × MW ÷ 10 | mg/dL = mmol/L × MW ÷ 10 |
| Molarity to molality | needs density and MW | m = 1000M ÷ (1000d – MWM) |
| Molality to molarity | needs density and MW | M = 1000md ÷ (1000 + mMW) |
| Molarity to ppm | × MW × 1,000 | ppm ≈ M × MW × 1,000 |
| PPM to molarity | ÷ (MW × 1,000) | M ≈ ppm ÷ (MW × 1,000) |
| PPB to ppm | ÷ 1,000 | ppm = ppb ÷ 1,000 |
| PPB to mg/L | ÷ 1,000 | mg/L ≈ ppb ÷ 1,000 |
| Pg/mL to ng/dL | × 0.1 | ng/dL = pg/mL × 0.1 |
Typical Use Cases
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How do I convert mass and molecular weight to molarity?
A: First divide grams by molecular weight to get moles, then divide by liters to get molarity. This converter combines both steps into one calculation.
Q: Why is volume required?
A: Molarity is moles per liter, so you need the final solution volume, not just the amount of solute.
Q: What does molecular weight mean in this converter?
A: It is the grams-per-mole value used to translate the weighed mass into moles before the concentration is calculated.
Q: Can I use decimal volumes and weights?
A: Yes. The converter accepts decimal values so you can handle aliquots, partial dissolutions, or non-round batch sizes.
Q: Why does the table use 1 L and 100 g/mol?
A: Those are clean reference values that show the calculation pattern. The live converter works with your actual inputs instead.
Q: When is this useful?
A: It is useful when you know how many grams went into a flask and want to report the resulting solution concentration in molarity.
