Mole per Litre to Gram per Litre Converter

This converter changes a concentration from moles per litre (mol/L) to grams per litre (g/L). It is a routine task in chemistry, water-quality work, clinical laboratories and environmental monitoring, where the same underlying amount of substance is reported in different units depending on the field and the instrument. The method is direct: multiply the molar concentration by the molar mass of the solute, which gives the mass concentration directly in grams per litre. Because the conversion crosses between an amount of substance and a mass, you also enter the molar mass of the solute; the default shown is for glucose, so replace it with the molar mass of your own compound. Parts-per notation here follows the common convention that, for a dilute water-based solution whose density is close to one gram per millilitre, one part per million equals one milligram per litre. Enter your starting value to see the converted figure update immediately. Every result here is computed deterministically from the conversion factors shown in the formula below, never estimated, and the worked example reconciles exactly to the calculator defaults so that you can check each step of the arithmetic for yourself before relying on the answer.

This converter applies g/L = c (mol/L) x M (g/mol). With a starting value of 0.005 and a molar mass of 180.16 g/mol, the result is 0.90 g/L.

Source: US National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). As at 25 June 2026.

Value to convert
Molar mass of the solute (g/mol); glucose 180.16
Concentration in g/L--

Conversion formula

g/L = c (mol/L) x M (g/mol)
c = molar concentration in moles per litre
M = molar mass of the solute in grams per mole
The product gives the mass concentration in grams per litre

The factors above handle the scaling between the two units. Figures are computed deterministically from these factors, never estimated.

Worked example

  1. Grams per litre = 0.005 mol/L x 180.16 g/mol
  2. Result = 0.90 g/L

These are the calculator's default inputs (starting value 0.005, molar mass 180.16 g/mol), so the result above matches the widget exactly.

Mole per Litre to Gram per Litre Converter: frequently asked questions

What does this mol/L to g/L converter do?

It converts a concentration value from the first unit to the second using the fixed relationship shown in the formula. Because the conversion moves between an amount of substance and a mass, you supply the molar mass of the solute as well as the starting value. The result updates as you type.

How does the formula work?

The formula is g/L = c (mol/L) x M (g/mol). The molar mass links moles to grams, and the remaining factors handle the litre, decilitre and milligram or microgram scaling between the two units. The worked example on this page applies it to the default inputs and arrives at the displayed answer.

Does the parts-per-million convention assume water?

For dilute water-based solutions, the common convention is that one part per million equals one milligram per litre, because the solution density is close to one gram per millilitre. For concentrated solutions or non-aqueous solvents, the density correction matters and a mass-fraction definition should be used instead.

Which molar mass should I enter?

Enter the molar mass of the specific solute you are measuring, in grams per mole. The default is glucose at 180.16 g/mol, which is common in clinical examples, but sodium chloride, calcium carbonate and every other compound has its own molar mass, so change the value to match your substance.

Are the results exact?

The arithmetic is exact for the factors shown, and figures are computed deterministically rather than estimated. The only approximation is the parts-per convention that one part per million equals one milligram per litre, which holds for dilute aqueous solutions near unit density. For demanding work, confirm the solution density and use a mass-fraction definition where required.

Official sources

Reviewed by the CalculatorHub team, edited by James Graham, 25 June 2026. See our methodology. This is general information, not financial, tax, legal or investment advice.