An approach to identify mass diffusion coefficients (D) is presented, and applied to the case of a slab. It was based on a numerical exploitation of the concentration profiles to estimate the mass fluxes. The effect of the quality of the experimental data (spatial resolution, Δz¯, temporal resolution, ΔFo, of the concentration profiles, sampling) on the bias and sensitivity of the method was studied thanks to the use of simulated data (Fo∈[0,2]), to which could be added Gaussian noise. Estimated D value were compared with the true solution (the one used for generating the simulated concentration data). The errors on D are large at low Fo<0.2. But for Fo>0.2, D can be estimated with less than 1% of bias if ΔFo<0.1 and Δz¯<0.2. Space resolution had a minor effect. Although rough, the numerical procedure adopted in this paper revealed especially suitable for modern techniques of concentration measurements exhibiting high-accuracy (<1%).