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Chemistry guide

Significant Figures in Chemistry

Chemistry uses significant figures to connect every final answer to real measurement precision. Use the rules below for lab measurements, unit conversions, molarity, density, temperature changes, and report-ready final answers.

The short chemistry answer

In chemistry, significant figures tell the reader how precise a measured or calculated value is. The final reported answer should be limited by the least precise measured data, while exact counts and defined unit conversions do not reduce precision.

Measured data

Mass, volume, temperature, pressure, and concentration values have limited precision.

Operation matters

Add/subtract by decimal places. Multiply/divide by significant figures.

Exact numbers

Counted items and defined metric conversions are exact, so they are not the limiting measurement.

Chemistry measurement examples

ValueSig figsChemistry useWhy
25.0 C3Temperature recorded to the tenths placeThe final decimal zero is significant because it reports instrument precision.
0.0250 L3Volume in litersThe first zeros are placeholders, but the final zero after 25 is measured.
1.0000 L5Volumetric flask or prepared solutionZeros after a decimal and after a non-zero digit count as significant.
6.02 x 10^233Avogadro-style scientific notation valueOnly the coefficient controls the significant figure count.
1000 mL = 1 LexactMetric unit conversionDefined metric conversions do not limit the precision of the final result.

Which rule do I use in chemistry calculations?

1

Addition and subtraction

Round the final answer to the least number of decimal places, not the fewest sig figs.

28.1 C - 25.0 C = 3.1 C

Both temperatures are reported to tenths, so the difference is reported to tenths.

2

Multiplication and division

Round the final answer to the same number of significant figures as the least precise measured input.

0.3829 mol / 1.000 L = 0.3829 M

0.3829 mol and 1.000 L each have 4 sig figs, so the molarity keeps 4 sig figs.

3

Mixed chemistry calculations

Keep guard digits through the calculation, then round once at the end using the operation that controls the final step.

(12.52 mL + 3.1 mL) x 1.04 g/mL = 16 g

The volume sum is limited to tenths, then multiplication with 1.04 g/mL limits the final mass to 2 sig figs.

Exact numbers and unit conversions

Chemistry problems often mix measurements with exact counts and conversion factors. Before rounding, label every number as measured or exact. Only measured or rounded values can control the final significant figures.

NumberTypeSig fig effectHow to use it
12 test tubesExact countDoes not limit sig figsYou counted the tubes. There is no measurement uncertainty in the count itself.
1 kg = 1000 gDefined metric conversionDoes not limit sig figsMetric prefix conversions are exact when used as definitions.
0.997 g/mL densityMeasured valueCan limit sig figsA density from a table or experiment has stated precision and may control the answer.
1 lb approx. 454 gRounded conversionCan limit sig figsIf a conversion factor is given as an approximation, use its shown precision.

Mini chemistry practice set

ProblemCalculator valueReport asReason
12.52 mL + 3.1 mL15.62 mL15.6 mLAddition uses decimal places. 3.1 mL is reported to tenths.
2.50 g / 1.2 mL2.0833... g/mL2.1 g/mLDivision uses significant figures. 1.2 mL has 2 sig figs.
0.00450 mol x 2.00.00900 mol0.0090 molIf 2.0 is a measured factor, the final answer has 2 sig figs.
28.1 C - 25.0 C3.1 C3.1 CBoth measurements are to tenths, so the difference is to tenths.

Common chemistry sig fig mistakes

Rounding every intermediate line instead of keeping guard digits until the final answer.

Using the decimal-place rule for multiplication or division problems.

Letting exact metric conversions, such as 1000 mL in 1 L, reduce the answer precision.

Dropping a final zero in a lab answer, such as writing 2.50 g as 2.5 g when the zero communicates precision.

Copying every calculator digit into the report even when the measurements do not support that many digits.

Frequently asked questions

Why are significant figures important in chemistry?

Significant figures keep chemistry answers aligned with the precision of the instruments and measurements used. A calculated concentration, mass, volume, or temperature change should not claim more precision than the data supports.

Which sig fig rule applies to chemistry addition and subtraction?

For addition and subtraction, round the final answer to the least number of decimal places among the measured inputs. This is why 12.52 mL + 3.1 mL becomes 15.6 mL, not 15.62 mL.

Which sig fig rule applies to chemistry multiplication and division?

For multiplication and division, round the final answer to the same number of significant figures as the measured input with the fewest significant figures.

Do exact numbers affect sig figs in chemistry?

Exact numbers do not limit significant figures. Counted items and defined conversions, such as 1 kg = 1000 g, are treated as exact. Measured or rounded conversion factors can limit the final answer.

Should I round during intermediate chemistry steps?

No. Keep at least one or two guard digits during intermediate steps, then round the final answer once. Early rounding can change the final result.

How do unit conversions affect significant figures?

Defined unit conversions do not limit sig figs, but measured conversion factors do. Identify which numbers are exact before deciding which measurement controls the final answer.

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