Calculate the ionic strength of serum from electrolyte concentrations. Understand how each ion contributes to solution behavior, activity coefficients, and protein interactions.
Enter electrolyte concentrations to compute ionic strength with individual ion contributions.
All values in mmol/L
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How ionic strength is computed from electrolyte concentrations.
Sum each ion's concentration (in mol/L) multiplied by the square of its charge, then multiply by one-half. Divalent ions like Ca²⁺ and Mg²⁺ contribute 4× more per unit concentration than monovalent ions.
The squared charge means that a 1 mmol/L increase in Ca²⁺ has the same effect on ionic strength as a 4 mmol/L increase in Na⁺. This is why even small changes in divalent ions matter.
Updates in real-time as you change values above.
Why ionic strength matters in clinical chemistry.
Ionic strength is a measure of the total concentration of charge carriers in a solution. It quantifies how "electrically dense" a solution is. Higher ionic strength means more ion-ion interactions, which reduces the effective activity of each ion.
Ionic strength affects activity coefficients, which influence ion-selective electrode (ISE) measurements, protein solubility, enzyme kinetics, and drug binding. Understanding ionic strength helps interpret lab values more accurately, especially in patients with severe electrolyte disturbances.
Typical ionic strength values for human serum.
| Parameter | Normal Range | Unit | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Na⁺ | 135 – 145 | mmol/L | Largest contributor (monovalent) |
| K⁺ | 3.5 – 5.0 | mmol/L | Small monovalent contribution |
| Ca²⁺ | 2.2 – 2.6 | mmol/L | Divalent — 4× charge weight |
| Mg²⁺ | 0.7 – 1.1 | mmol/L | Divalent — 4× charge weight |
| Cl⁻ | 96 – 106 | mmol/L | Major anion contributor |
| HCO₃⁻ | 22 – 28 | mmol/L | Monovalent anion |
| Ionic Strength | 0.130 – 0.170 | mol/L | Normal serum range |
This gauge shows your calculated ionic strength.
What different ionic strength values mean clinically.
When understanding ionic strength changes clinical decisions.
Answers to common questions about ionic strength.