Beer-Lambert Path Length Calculator
Beer-Lambert Path Length Calculator
Calculate the optimal cuvette path length for your sample — or determine sample concentration from a known absorbance reading. Based on Beer-Lambert Law.
For best spectrophotometric accuracy, aim for an absorbance between 0.1 and 1.0. Values above 1.5 indicate detector saturation risk; values below 0.05 approach the noise floor. For non-standard path lengths or custom cuvette geometries, see our custom cuvette options or fabrication method guide.
Find Path Length
Know your target absorbance and sample concentration? The calculator solves for the ideal path length and maps it to the nearest standard MQ cuvette sizes.
Find Concentration
Have a measured absorbance and a known cuvette path length? Enter your extinction coefficient and get the sample concentration with automatic unit scaling.
Path Length Calculator
Enter your values below — results appear instantly
Need a non-standard path length or custom geometry?
View Custom Cuvettes →Results are based on Beer-Lambert Law (A = ε × c × l) and assume ideal dilute solutions with no scattering, inner-filter effects, or matrix interference. Always verify experimentally for quantitative work.
After calculating, you will see up to three nearest standard MQ path lengths displayed as cards:
Nearest standard size
The MQ cuvette whose path length is closest to your calculated value. This is your best starting point — use it with your current concentration.
Shorter path length
A shorter cuvette will increase absorbance for the same concentration. Useful if your Closest Match gives A < 0.1 and you need a stronger signal.
Longer path length
A longer cuvette will decrease absorbance. Useful if your Closest Match gives A > 1.5 and you want to avoid detector saturation without diluting.
The extinction coefficient (ε) and concentration (c) units must be compatible. The table below shows which combinations are valid. Mixing incompatible units is the most common source of calculation errors.
| ε Unit | Valid Concentration Units | Typical Use Case |
|---|---|---|
M⁻¹cm⁻¹ (molar) |
✓ mol/L, mmol/L, µmol/L, nmol/L | Proteins, small molecules, nucleotides — when MW is known |
mL·mg⁻¹·cm⁻¹ (specific) |
✓ mg/mL, µg/mL | DNA, RNA, crude protein extracts — when MW is unknown |
M⁻¹cm⁻¹ with mg/mL |
✗ Unit mismatch | Will give wrong result — the calculator will show an error |