Calculate protein concentration from A280 absorbance, extinction coefficient, or standard curve. Supports Beer-Lambert, BCA, and Bradford methods.
Use our Extinction Coefficient Calculator above.
Required for mg/mL output.
If sample was diluted before reading.
E1% is the absorbance of a 1% (10 mg/mL) protein solution at 1 cm pathlength. It can be found in protein data sheets or calculated from ε and MW.
A280 of 10 mg/mL at 1 cm.
Enter the slope and intercept from a BCA or Bradford standard curve (Absorbance = slope × concentration + intercept).
The Beer-Lambert law states that the absorbance (A) of a solution is proportional to the concentration (C) and pathlength (l): A = ε × C × l
Rearranging for concentration: C (mol/L) = A / (ε × l)
To convert to mg/mL: multiply the molar concentration by the molecular weight (Da) and divide by 1000.
This method works best for pure protein samples. Nucleic acid contamination (A260 > A280) will cause an overestimate of protein concentration. A260/A280 ratio above 0.6 indicates significant nucleic acid contamination.