About Chemistry Calculators
ChemistryCalculators.net is maintained by Editor Gail Joyce as a collection of chemistry tools built for common classroom, homework, and lab-prep tasks.
Maintained with editorial review
This page explains how the site is maintained, how calculator pages are reviewed, and how editorial cleanup decisions are made across overlapping chemistry topics.
What This Site Is For
The goal of the site is simple: make repetitive chemistry math easier without burying the result behind logins, downloads, or bloated interfaces. The most useful pages tend to be the ones that help with dilution prep, titration setup, mole conversions, water chemistry, and other calculations people do more than once.
Rather than trying to be a textbook replacement, the site aims to be a practical companion for checking formulas, planning solution prep, and moving faster through coursework or routine lab work.
Editorial Responsibility
Editor Gail Joyce oversees the site’s editorial direction and the review of high-priority calculator pages. The aim is to keep the site practical and easy to use without overstating what a calculator alone can guarantee.
ChemistryCalculators.net is intended to support students, self-learners, and routine lab-prep workflows by making formulas, units, and inputs easier to check before moving on to more detailed class notes, lab SOPs, or primary references.
How Pages Are Reviewed
Formula Review
Calculator logic is checked against the standard equation or conversion the page is based on before broader copy edits are made.
Worked Examples
High-priority pages are reviewed for clearer examples, expected units, and common input mistakes that could confuse users.
Source Notes
Where a page cites a source or constant, the reference is meant to show the standard, textbook-style relationship, or chemistry reference point used while reviewing that calculator.
What Visitors Should Expect
Free Access
The calculators are free to use and intended to be quick to access on desktop or mobile.
Practical Coverage
The best-covered topics are the ones people use most often, including dilution, titration, molarity, and mole conversions.
Page Maintenance
Pages with overlapping intent, weak examples, or unclear copy are prioritized for correction and consolidation over time.
Human Double-Checks
Users should still verify important values for graded work, lab reports, or safety-critical calculations against their own references.
Get in Touch
If a calculator gives an unexpected result, has a missing unit, or needs a clearer example, the fastest way to help the site improve is to send a note through the contact page.