pKa Calculator – Determine Acid-Base Dissociation Constant

Advanced Equilibrium Buffer & Acid-Base Solver

Calculate pH
Calculate pKa
pH = pKa + log₁₀([A⁻]/[HA])
STATUS
Waiting for results...

Understanding pKa and Buffer Solutions

Master the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation and learn how acid dissociation constants determine the pH of chemical equilibria.

🧪

What is pKa?

The pKa value is the negative base-10 logarithm of the acid dissociation constant (Ka). A lower pKa indicates a stronger acid that readily donates protons.

🧮

Henderson-Hasselbalch

The central formula for buffer chemistry: pH = pKa + log([A⁻]/[HA]). It relates the pH of a solution to the ratio of conjugate base to weak acid.

🛡️

Buffer Capacity

Buffers resist drastic pH changes upon the addition of acidic or basic components. They are most effective when the desired pH is within ±1 unit of the pKa.

⚖️

The 50/50 Rule

When the concentration of the conjugate base equals the weak acid ([A⁻] = [HA]), the log term becomes 0. Therefore, pH exactly equals pKa.

📉

Weak vs. Strong Acids

Strong acids dissociate completely, so pH relies directly on their concentration. Weak acids establish an equilibrium, requiring pKa for accurate calculation.

🔄

Base Buffers

For alkaline buffers containing a weak base and conjugate acid, you can use the pOH variant: pOH = pKb + log([BH⁺]/[B]).

Real-World Applications in Science

From human physiology to pharmaceutical engineering, controlling pH via pKa modeling is critical across disciplines.

💊

Pharmacology & Drug Absorption

Drugs absorb best when they are unionized. Pharmacologists use pKa to predict whether a drug will be absorbed in the acidic stomach or the alkaline intestines.

🩸

Human Blood Regulation

The bicarbonate buffer system relies on the pKa of carbonic acid to tightly maintain human blood pH at around 7.4, preventing fatal acidosis or alkalosis.

🧬

Protein Purification

In biochemistry, an amino acid's pKa determines a protein's isoelectric point (pI). This is essential for separating proteins using ion-exchange chromatography.

🌱

Agriculture & Soil Chemistry

Nutrient solubility depends heavily on soil pH. Agronomists calculate soil buffering capacity to determine how much lime is needed to neutralize acidic land.

🏭

Industrial Chemistry

Scaling up chemical reactions requires massive buffer tanks. Engineers calculate exact pKa equilibria to prevent runaway reactions or degraded yields.

🥫

Food Science & Preservation

Weak acids like citric or acetic acid are used as preservatives. Their pKa determines how much of the acid is in the active, microbe-fighting unionized state.

Calculation Tips & Assumptions

Avoid common laboratory errors by understanding the limitations and necessary conditions of acid-base calculations.

🌡️

Temperature Effects

The pKa value is a thermodynamic constant that changes with temperature. Always ensure the pKa reference value you use matches your lab's operating temperature.

🔍

The "x is small" Assumption

Basic weak acid calculations assume dissociation (x) is negligible compared to initial concentration. This fails for relatively strong "weak" acids or very dilute solutions.

⚖️

Activity vs. Concentration

At high concentrations (> 0.1 M), molecular crowding occurs. You must use "activity coefficients" instead of simple molar concentrations for highly accurate pH tracking.

🔢

Polyprotic Acids

Acids like Phosphoric (H₃PO₄) have multiple pKa values (pKa1, pKa2, pKa3). You must use the specific pKa that corresponds to the pH range you are buffering.

📐

Unit Consistency

The ratio [A⁻]/[HA] is unitless, but both values must be in the exact same unit (e.g., Molarity or Moles). Mixing grams and moles will ruin the calculation.

🚫

Limits of the Equation

The Henderson-Hasselbalch equation breaks down at extreme pH values or when the ratio of base to acid exceeds 10:1 or drops below 1:10.

0

No products in the cart.