Electrophoretic Mobility Calculator

Choose your method, enter measurements, and calculate mobility in seconds today easily. See velocity, field, and model notes, then download tidy reports as files.

Tip: Mobility is commonly reported in m²/(V·s) or cm²/(V·s). Use the method that matches your measurement setup.

Calculator Inputs

Large screens: 3 columns · Small: 2 · Mobile: 1
Changing method keeps your page clean and focused.
Use measured migration velocity under applied field.
Field equals voltage divided by electrode spacing.
Reset

Example Data Table

These examples show typical magnitudes. Replace with your experimental values.

Scenario Inputs Computed mobility (m²/V·s) Computed mobility (cm²/V·s)
Capillary observation v = 1.2×10⁻⁴ m/s, E = 2.0×10³ V/m 6.0×10⁻⁸ 6.0×10⁻⁴
Gel tracking d = 35 mm, t = 180 s, E = 250 V/cm 7.777…×10⁻⁹ 7.777…×10⁻⁵
Zeta model ζ = -25 mV, εr = 78.5, η = 1.0 mPa·s, f = 1.5 -2.61×10⁻⁸ -2.61×10⁻⁴

Formula Used

Mobility from velocity and field
μe = v / E
v is migration velocity (m/s). E is electric field (V/m).
Velocity from distance and time
v = d / t
d is travel distance (m). t is time (s). Then use μe = v/E.
Mobility from zeta potential model
μe = (ε ζ f(κa)) / η
ε = εr ε0 is permittivity (F/m), ζ is zeta potential (V), η is dynamic viscosity (Pa·s), and f(κa) depends on double-layer thickness.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Select the calculation method that matches your experiment.
  2. Enter your measurements and choose the correct units.
  3. Click Calculate to see mobility immediately under the header.
  4. Review the notes to confirm the model and assumptions used.
  5. Download a CSV or PDF report for lab notebooks and sharing.

Practical Notes

Professional Article

1. Why mobility is used

Electrophoretic mobility (μe) links motion to the applied electric field, making it a core metric for separations, colloid stability, and surface chemistry. Higher absolute μe usually means faster migration at the same field, enabling shorter runs or reduced voltage demands. It also supports method comparison across instruments and sample types.

2. Measurement routes in practice

In microscopy or capillary observations, velocity is measured directly and mobility follows μe=v/E. In gels and microfluidic chips, distance and time are tracked, so v=d/t is computed first. This calculator supports both workflows with unit conversions and consistent SI outputs for reporting and teaching.

3. Typical ranges for sanity checks

In many aqueous systems, ionic mobilities often sit near 10−8 to 10−7 m²/(V·s), while particles and macromolecules frequently appear closer to 10−9 to 10−8 m²/(V·s). Values far outside these bands can signal unit errors, heating, or electro-osmotic flow. Use them for screening before reporting.

4. Selecting a usable electric field

Electric field is commonly computed as E=V/L, where L is electrode spacing. Typical laboratory fields range from about 102 to 105 V/m, depending on geometry. Increasing E boosts speed but can increase Joule heating, bubbles, or band broadening, so stable buffers help.

5. Temperature, viscosity, and permittivity

Mobility depends on solvent properties. Viscosity drops as temperature rises, which increases μe for a fixed zeta potential. Relative permittivity can also change with temperature and composition, affecting ε=εrε0. When comparing runs, record temperature and viscosity assumptions.

6. Zeta models and Henry’s function

If velocity is unavailable, mobility can be estimated from zeta potential using μe=(εζf)/η. Smoluchowski (f≈1.5) is used for thin double layers at higher ionic strength, while Hückel (f≈1.0) applies for thicker double layers at low ionic strength. Henry’s model allows intermediate f.

7. Quality checks and troubleshooting

Verify signs and units early: negative ζ should produce negative mobility under the same convention. Ensure field units match geometry; V/cm versus V/m causes 100× errors. If μe changes with E, consider electro-osmotic flow, polarization, or nonlinear effects at high fields.

8. Reporting results consistently

Report μe in m²/(V·s) and optionally cm²/(V·s), along with field, temperature, buffer, and model choice. Showing ×10−8 m²/(V·s) helps comparison with literature tables. Use the CSV and PDF exports for traceable records and quick review during audits.

FAQs

1. What is electrophoretic mobility?

It is the proportionality between migration velocity and electric field: μe = v/E. It describes how fast a charged species moves per unit field in a given medium.

2. Which units should I report?

SI is m²/(V·s). Many labs also report cm²/(V·s) by multiplying by 10,000. Keep the same units across datasets to avoid hidden scaling errors.

3. How do I compute electric field from voltage?

Use E = V/L, where V is applied voltage and L is electrode spacing along the field direction. Convert L to meters if you want E in V/m.

4. When should I use the zeta-potential model?

Use it when you have ζ measurements and need an estimated mobility, or when validating trends across formulations. It assumes the Henry/Smoluchowski/Hückel framework and requires viscosity and permittivity.

5. What does a negative mobility mean?

With the common convention, negative mobility indicates motion opposite the electric-field direction, typically for negatively charged particles or ions. Make sure your sign convention matches your instrument’s reporting.

6. Why do my results change with field strength?

Field-dependent mobility can indicate heating, electro-osmotic flow, polarization, or nonlinear electrophoresis. Check buffering, temperature, and whether the measured velocity includes bulk flow.

7. How accurate are the exports?

The CSV and PDF exports mirror the displayed values and method notes. For publication, also record raw measurements, temperature, buffer composition, and any instrument corrections used.

Accurate mobility estimates help optimize separations and formulations daily.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.