The Absorption Capacity Calculator computes moles of solute absorbed per unit mass or volume of absorbent from equilibrium concentration data.
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About the Absorption Capacity Calculator
This calculator estimates how much solute a material absorbs per unit of the material. It is widely used in chemistry labs to compare polymers, resins, membranes, soils, and liquids. You can compute capacity based on changes in concentration before and after contact. The calculator also supports conversion to moles when you enter molar mass.
Absorption capacity often appears as mg of solute per gram of absorber. Many researchers also prefer mmol per gram to normalize by chemistry rather than mass. Both views help you understand performance across experiments. This tool keeps your numbers consistent and your assumptions clear.
Use it during method development, material screening, and quality control. If you run batch tests, just measure initial and final concentration. If you track mass balance directly, enter moles or mass removed instead. The calculator reports capacity and flags common unit mismatches.

The Mechanics Behind Absorption Capacity
Absorption is the uptake of a substance into the bulk of another phase. In practice, you place a material in contact with a solution or gas, wait for a set time, and measure the concentration change. The absorbed amount equals what vanished from the surrounding phase after losses are accounted for. Capacity scales that amount to the mass of the absorbing material.
- Batch contact: Mix a known volume of solution with a known mass of absorber.
- Measure initial concentration (C0) and equilibrium concentration (Ce).
- Calculate moles or mass removed from the fluid: (C0 − Ce) × volume.
- Divide by absorber mass to get capacity: per gram or per kilogram.
- Convert to moles using molar mass when needed for mmol/g.
The same logic works for gases if you can express the removed amount in moles. You may use gas concentration or pressure data with temperature and volume. Regardless of phase, the key is a reliable before-and-after measurement and consistent units. The calculator organizes these steps and applies the correct conversions.
Equations Used by the Absorption Capacity Calculator
The calculator uses standard mass balance relations. You can express capacity on a mass basis (mg/g) or molar basis (mmol/g). Choose the path that matches your measurements. Below are the core equations it applies in sequence.
- Amount removed (mass basis): Δm = (C0 − Ce) × V, where C0 and Ce share units (e.g., mg/L), and V is in L.
- Capacity (mass basis): q_mass = Δm / m_absorber, reported as mg/g or g/g as requested.
- Amount removed (molar basis): Δn = (C0 − Ce) × V if C0 and Ce are molar (e.g., mol/L). Or Δn = Δm / M when converting from mass using molar mass M (g/mol).
- Capacity (molar basis): q_molar = Δn / m_absorber, typically in mol/g or mmol/g.
- Gas data option (simplified): n_removed = (C0 − Ce) × V_gas if concentrations are mol/L_gas; or use Δn from pressure data via ideal gas: n = P × V / (R × T).
The calculator checks that your concentration and volume units match. It also verifies that mass, moles, and molar mass align. When you choose mmol/g output, it converts using M as needed. If Ce exceeds C0, it warns you that the result would be negative and suggests checking your data or blanks.
What You Need to Use the Absorption Capacity Calculator
Gather a few measurements before you start. You will enter concentrations, volumes, and absorber mass. Decide whether you want the result in mass or molar terms. If you plan to report capacity in mmol/g, have the molar mass at hand.
- Initial concentration C0 of the solute (e.g., mg/L or mol/L).
- Equilibrium concentration Ce after contact (same unit as C0).
- Solution or gas phase volume V that contacted the absorber (e.g., L or mL).
- Absorber mass m (e.g., g).
- Molar mass M of the solute (g/mol) if you need moles or mmol-based capacity.
- Optional: Temperature and pressure if you derive gas-phase moles from P–V–T data.
Keep ranges realistic to avoid edge-case errors. Very small volumes or very low concentrations can amplify noise. If Ce is below your detection limit, use a conservative value or a censored-data approach. If you suspect wall losses or evaporation, include blanks and subtract those losses before you calculate capacity.
Step-by-Step: Use the Absorption Capacity Calculator
Here’s a concise overview before we dive into the key points:
- Select your preferred output: mg/g, g/g, mol/g, or mmol/g.
- Enter C0 and Ce, ensuring both use the same concentration unit.
- Enter the contacted volume V and the absorber mass m with matching units.
- If reporting molar capacity, enter the solute molar mass M.
- Review the preview of unit conversions and confirm correctness.
- Submit to compute capacity and note any warnings or flags.
These points provide quick orientation—use them alongside the full explanations in this page.
Example Scenarios
A lab tests a new polymer to remove a dye from water. The initial dye concentration C0 is 120 mg/L in 0.250 L of solution. After 2 hours, the equilibrium concentration Ce is 15 mg/L. The polymer mass is 0.50 g. The absorbed mass is (120 − 15) × 0.250 = 26.25 mg. Capacity is 26.25 mg / 0.50 g = 52.5 mg/g. What this means: the polymer absorbs 52.5 mg of dye per gram under these conditions.
A resin is used to capture lithium ions. The test uses 2.0 L of water with C0 = 30 mg/L Li and finishes at Ce = 5 mg/L. The resin mass is 10 g. The absorbed mass is (30 − 5) × 2.0 = 50 mg. Molar mass of Li is 6.94 g/mol, so absorbed moles are 0.050 g / 6.94 g/mol = 0.00720 mol. Capacity is 0.00720 mol / 10 g = 0.000720 mol/g = 0.72 mmol/g. What this means: the resin holds about 0.72 millimoles of Li per gram for this run.
Limits of the Absorption Capacity Approach
Capacity from a single batch test is a snapshot. It depends on contact time, temperature, and matrix chemistry. It also assumes losses happen only by absorption, which may not be true. Use this number wisely and within its context.
- Kinetics: Short contact times underestimate equilibrium capacity.
- Competing species: Ions or organics can reduce effective uptake.
- Matrix effects: pH, ionic strength, and viscosity change behavior.
- Non-ideal losses: Volatilization, precipitation, or wall adsorption skew data.
- Scale-up: Batch values may differ from continuous-flow performance.
Pair capacity with isotherm data or breakthrough curves when possible. If you need design values, collect data across concentrations and fit a model. Document temperature, time, and agitation so others can reproduce your results. Treat capacity as a comparable metric, not a universal constant.
Units Reference
Clear units prevent conversion errors and make results comparable. Absorption tables and reports often mix mass and molar quantities. Use this reference to align concentration, volume, mass, and capacity. Keep your base units consistent throughout the calculation.
| Quantity | Symbol | Typical units | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial concentration | C0 | mg/L, mg/mL, mol/L, mmol/L | Must match Ce units. |
| Equilibrium concentration | Ce | mg/L, mg/mL, mol/L, mmol/L | After contact time. |
| Phase volume | V | L, mL | Convert mL to L when using mg/L or mol/L. |
| Absorber mass | m | g, kg | Be consistent with capacity units. |
| Capacity | q | mg/g, g/g, mol/g, mmol/g | Report both mass and molar if useful. |
| Molar mass | M | g/mol | Required for molar capacity from mass data. |
Read across each row to set your inputs. If your concentration is mg/L and your volume is mL, convert volume to liters before you multiply. If you switch to molar reporting, divide the absorbed mass by M to get moles, then divide by absorber mass. Keep track of prefixes like milli and kilo to avoid 1000-fold errors.
Troubleshooting
If the calculator output looks odd, check your inputs and assumptions. Most problems come from unit mismatches or measurement limits. Use blanks and duplicates to confirm your data quality.
- Negative capacity? Verify that C0 ≥ Ce and that blanks are subtracted.
- Unrealistic magnitude? Confirm all unit conversions, especially mL to L.
- Too many significant figures? Round to reflect instrument precision.
- Ce below detection? Use a reasonable surrogate or report a minimum capacity.
Still stuck? Recalculate using both mass and molar units to see if trends agree. Plot C0 versus Ce for several runs to spot outliers. If gas data are involved, ensure temperature and pressure are correct before converting to moles.
FAQ about Absorption Capacity Calculator
What is the difference between absorption and adsorption?
Absorption is uptake into the bulk of a material, while adsorption is attachment onto a surface. Many tests blend these effects in practice. This calculator reports net uptake per mass of material, regardless of mechanism.
Can I use mass-only measurements without concentration data?
Yes. If you directly measure mass gained by the absorber or mass lost from the solution, enter those values as Δm and divide by absorber mass. If you want molar capacity, divide by molar mass first.
How accurate is the capacity result?
Accuracy depends on your measurements of concentration, volume, and mass. Precision improves with replicates, controlled temperature, and proper blanks. Report uncertainty if possible, using propagated errors from your instruments.
Which unit should I choose, mg/g or mmol/g?
Use mg/g for quick comparisons and when molar mass varies across samples. Use mmol/g when reaction stoichiometry matters or when comparing different solutes on a chemical basis.
Glossary for Absorption Capacity
Absorption
Uptake of a substance into the bulk phase of another material, such as a solute entering a polymer or liquid.
Adsorption
Attachment of molecules onto the surface of a solid or liquid. Often accompanies absorption in practical systems.
Sorbent
The material that takes up the solute or gas. In this context, it is the absorber whose mass you divide by.
Sorbate
The substance being absorbed or adsorbed. Its concentration decreases in the surrounding phase during contact.
Capacity (q)
Amount of sorbate absorbed per unit mass of sorbent, usually in mg/g or mmol/g, computed at test conditions.
Equilibrium Concentration (Ce)
The measured concentration in the fluid after contact time, used to calculate the amount removed from the phase.
Molar Mass (M)
The mass per mole of a substance in g/mol, used to convert between mass and moles for molar capacity.
Sources & Further Reading
Here’s a concise overview before we dive into the key points:
- IUPAC Gold Book: Absorption definition
- NIST: International System of Units (SI) overview
- Langmuir isotherm: adsorption and capacity modeling
- BET theory: surface area and multilayer adsorption
- Henry’s law: gas solubility and concentration-pressure relations
These points provide quick orientation—use them alongside the full explanations in this page.
References
- International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC)
- International Commission on Illumination (CIE)
- NIST Photometry
- ISO Standards — Light & Radiation