The methodology involves stepwise dilution of a substance in a solution, where each dilution reduces the concentration by a constant factor. This process is often initiated with a concentrated stock solution and successively diluting it to achieve lower concentrations. A common example would be taking a bacterial culture and sequentially diluting it by a factor of ten at each step, resulting in concentrations one-tenth, one-hundredth, one-thousandth, and so forth, of the original stock. The mathematical formulas used to determine the required volumes for each dilution are based on the principle of concentration multiplied by volume remaining constant during dilution.
This method is essential in various scientific disciplines. It is used to prepare solutions of appropriate concentrations for experimentation, to quantify the number of microorganisms in a sample, and to create standard curves for assays. The process is also critical in pharmacology for determining drug dosages and in environmental science for assessing pollutant levels. Historically, it has enabled scientists to work with very low concentrations or very high titers that would be impossible to measure directly.