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23 April, 17:02

A student made an initial 1:5 dilution of protein lysate. Then 2mL of that was added to 8mL of water. Lastly, the student made a 1:20 dilution of the second tube. What is the final dilution of protein lysate.

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  1. 23 April, 19:51
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    The final dilution is 1:400

    Explanation:

    Let's analyze what we are told: we have an initial 1:5 dilution of protein lysate. This means that the initial solution (stock solution) was diluted 5 times. Then, from this dilution the student prepared another dilution taking 2 mL of the first dilution in 8 mL of water. This is the same as saying we took 1 mL of first dilution in 4 mL of water (the ratio is the same), so we now have a second 1:4 dilution of the first dilution (1:5). Finally, the student made a third 1:20 dilution, this means that the second dilution was further diluted 20 times.

    So, to calculate the final dilution of protein lysate, we have to multiply all the dilution factors of every dilution prepared: in this case we have a final dilution of 1:20, this means we have a factor dilution of 20. But it was previously diluted 4 times, so we have a factor dilution of 20*4 = 80. However, this dilution was also previously diluted 5 times, so the new dilution factor is 80 * 5 = 400

    This means that the final dilution of the compound was diluted a total of 400 times compared to the initial concentration of stock solution.
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