Calculations of PH: Strong Acids and Bases
Calculations of PH: Strong Acids and Bases
Calculations of PH: Strong Acids and Bases
The calculation of the pH of a solution containing acids and/or bases is an example of a chemical
speciation calculation, that is, a mathematical procedure for calculating the concentrations of all
chemical species that are present in the solution. The complexity of the procedure depends on
the nature of the solution. For strong acids and bases no calculations are necessary except in
extreme situations. The pH of a solution containing a weak acid requires the solution of
a quadratic equation. The pH of a solution containing a weak base may require the solution of
a cubic equation. The general case requires the solution of a set of non-linear simultaneous
equations.
A complicating factor is that water itself is a weak acid and a weak base. It dissociates according
to the equilibrium
where [H+] stands for the concentration of the aquated hydronium ion and [OH-]
represents the concentration of the hydroxide ion. Kw has a value of about 1014 at 25 C,
so pure water has a pH of about 7. This equilibrium needs to be taken into account at
high pH and when the solute concentration is extremely low.
A weak acid or the conjugate acid of a weak base can be treated using the same
formalism.
Acid:
Base:
First, an acid dissociation constant is defined as follows. Electrical charges are
omitted from subsequent equations for the sake of generality
General method
Some systems, such as with polyprotic acids, are amenable
to spreadsheet calculations.[22] With three or more reagents
or when many complexes are formed with general formulae
such as ApBqHr the following general method can be used to
calculate the pH of a solution. For example, with three
reagents, each equilibrium is characterized by and
equilibrium constant, .