This calculator uses the classic dilution relationship: C1 × V1 = C2 × V2.
- C1 = stock concentration (from the bottle).
- C2 = target concentration (your working solution).
- V2 = final batch volume you want to make.
- V1 = concentrate volume to measure and add.
For quick conversions, the tool uses 1% ≈ 10,000 ppm. This is a practical approximation for many water-based mixes.
- Pick a preset or type your stock strength.
- Select the target concentration in ppm or percent.
- Enter the final volume and choose your unit.
- Optional: add a safety factor and rounding preference.
- Press Calculate dilution to view results above.
| Stock | Target | Final volume | Concentrate | Water |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6% bleach | 500 ppm | 1 L | 8.33 mL | 991.67 mL |
| 5% bleach | 200 ppm | 1 gal | 15.14 mL | 3,770.27 mL |
| 35% peroxide | 1,000 ppm | 2 L | 5.71 mL | 1,994.29 mL |
| 8,000 ppm quats | 400 ppm | 1 L | 50.00 mL | 950.00 mL |
| 70% alcohol | 50% | 500 mL | 357.14 mL | 142.86 mL |
Examples are for demonstration. Verify any real recipe on the label.
Why precise dilution supports garden biosecurity
Sanitizers are most effective when mixed to the label’s working strength. Under-dosing can leave pathogens on tools and benches, while over-dosing can corrode metals and stress sensitive plant surfaces. This calculator reduces guesswork by translating a stock concentrate into an accurate batch recipe for your chosen volume. For repeated jobs, keep a log of batches, dates, and treated surfaces; it improves consistency across seasons and can reduce unnecessary chemical use for audit needs.
Understanding ppm and percent in practical terms
Labels often list strength as a percent active ingredient, yet working solutions are frequently given in ppm. For water-based mixes, a common planning conversion is 1% ≈ 10,000 ppm. The calculator converts both units to a single ppm basis, applies the dilution equation, then presents results back in your selected volume unit.
Batch sizing and measuring tolerances
Small batches are sensitive to measuring error. If you need only a few milliliters of concentrate, rounding to a measurable increment can improve repeatability. Use the rounding options to match your tools, then re-check that the final water volume still reaches your intended batch size.
Performance factors: contact time, temperature, and soil load
Disinfection performance depends on adequate wet contact time and reasonable solution temperature. Organic debris can consume active ingredients, so cleaning first is essential. Record your planned contact time and temperature with each mix to support consistent routines across propagation, pruning, and harvest sanitation steps.
Example data for common greenhouse tasks
Example: a 6% stock mixed to 500 ppm in a 1 L batch requires 8.33 mL concentrate and 991.67 mL water. Example: an 8,000 ppm concentrate mixed to 400 ppm in a 1 L batch requires 50 mL concentrate and 950 mL water. Always validate targets and rinsing requirements on the product label.
1) What does the dilution ratio mean?
The ratio shows water parts per one part concentrate. For example, 1:99 means you add 99 parts water for every 1 part concentrate, then mix thoroughly to reach the final volume.
2) Can I enter targets in percent instead of ppm?
Yes. Select percent for the target unit and enter the desired percentage. The calculator converts to a ppm basis for the math, then reports the batch volumes in your chosen unit.
3) Why must the target be lower than the stock?
Dilution reduces concentration. If the target is equal to or higher than the stock, you would need to add more active ingredient than the concentrate provides, which is not possible without another product.
4) What is the safety factor used for?
The safety factor slightly increases the target to offset small losses from measuring, container residue, or minor volume error. Keep it modest and never use it to exceed label limits.
5) Should I clean tools before sanitizing?
Yes. Dirt and plant sap can reduce effectiveness by consuming active ingredients or preventing wet contact. Wash first, then apply the working solution for the recommended contact time.
6) How often should I mix a fresh solution?
Follow the product label. Many solutions lose strength over time, especially when exposed to light or organic load. If in doubt, mix smaller batches more frequently for consistency.
7) Is this calculator a substitute for label directions?
No. It is a measuring aid. Always follow the product label, local rules, and crop-safety guidance. Use this tool to scale the label recipe to your preferred batch size.