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EC50 and Molar concentration

Shortcuts: Differences, Similarities, Jaccard Similarity Coefficient, References.

Difference between EC50 and Molar concentration

EC50 vs. Molar concentration

Half maximal effective concentration (EC50) refers to the concentration of a drug, antibody or toxicant which induces a response halfway between the baseline and maximum after a specified exposure time. Molar concentration (also called molarity, amount concentration or substance concentration) is a measure of the concentration of a chemical species, in particular of a solute in a solution, in terms of amount of substance per unit volume of solution.

Similarities between EC50 and Molar concentration

EC50 and Molar concentration have 3 things in common (in Unionpedia): Litre, Molar concentration, Mole (unit).

Litre

The litre (SI spelling) or liter (American spelling) (symbols L or l, sometimes abbreviated ltr) is an SI accepted metric system unit of volume equal to 1 cubic decimetre (dm3), 1,000 cubic centimetres (cm3) or 1/1,000 cubic metre. A cubic decimetre (or litre) occupies a volume of 10 cm×10 cm×10 cm (see figure) and is thus equal to one-thousandth of a cubic metre. The original French metric system used the litre as a base unit. The word litre is derived from an older French unit, the litron, whose name came from Greek — where it was a unit of weight, not volume — via Latin, and which equalled approximately 0.831 litres. The litre was also used in several subsequent versions of the metric system and is accepted for use with the SI,, p. 124. ("Days" and "hours" are examples of other non-SI units that SI accepts.) although not an SI unit — the SI unit of volume is the cubic metre (m3). The spelling used by the International Bureau of Weights and Measures is "litre", a spelling which is shared by almost all English-speaking countries. The spelling "liter" is predominantly used in American English. One litre of liquid water has a mass of almost exactly one kilogram, because the kilogram was originally defined in 1795 as the mass of one cubic decimetre of water at the temperature of melting ice. Subsequent redefinitions of the metre and kilogram mean that this relationship is no longer exact.

EC50 and Litre · Litre and Molar concentration · See more »

Molar concentration

Molar concentration (also called molarity, amount concentration or substance concentration) is a measure of the concentration of a chemical species, in particular of a solute in a solution, in terms of amount of substance per unit volume of solution.

EC50 and Molar concentration · Molar concentration and Molar concentration · See more »

Mole (unit)

The mole, symbol mol, is the SI unit of amount of substance.

EC50 and Mole (unit) · Molar concentration and Mole (unit) · See more »

The list above answers the following questions

EC50 and Molar concentration Comparison

EC50 has 14 relations, while Molar concentration has 35. As they have in common 3, the Jaccard index is 6.12% = 3 / (14 + 35).

References

This article shows the relationship between EC50 and Molar concentration. To access each article from which the information was extracted, please visit:

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