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MM

mM stands for millimolar, a unit of concentration used in chemistry, biology, and medicine. It denotes the amount of solute per liter as one thousandth of a mole, written as 10^-3 mol/L. Consequently, 1 mM equals 0.001 M, and 1 M equals 1000 mM. The unit is commonly used to express concentrations of solutes in aqueous solutions, especially when reactants and products occur at millimolar levels.

Applications and contexts: mM is widely used to describe the concentrations of buffers, substrates, cofactors, and

Related units and notation: 1 mM equals 1000 µM, and 1 mmol/L is an equivalent notation (since

drug
solutions
in
biochemistry,
molecular
biology,
physiology,
and
pharmacology.
It
provides
a
convenient
scale
for
reactions
and
experiments
that
operate
in
the
millimolar
range.
Preparation
of
solutions
is
typically
done
by
diluting
a
stock
solution;
for
example,
from
a
1
M
stock,
a
0.01
M
(10
mM)
solution
can
be
prepared
by
a
100-fold
dilution.
1
mmol/L
=
1
mM).
The
uppercase
M
denotes
molarity
(moles
per
liter);
the
prefix
m
stands
for
milli.
The
unit
should
not
be
confused
with
millimeters
(mm).
In
practice,
researchers
may
also
express
concentrations
in
M,
mM,
or
mmol/L
depending
on
context
and
clarity.