How to Find the Concentration When You're Given the pH

How to Find the Concentration When You're Given the pH
••• deyangeorgiev/iStock/GettyImages

The pH scale ranges from 0 to 14 and is a measure of acidity or alkalinity. In the classroom or lab, there are many benefits to knowing the pH of a substance. The pH can be used to determine what a substance is and how it will react under certain circumstances.

It can also be used to determine the concentration of hydronium or hydroxide ions, which can lead to determination of the concentration of other ions in the solution.

You can use the pH equation below to perform the calculation to solve for unknowns.

Hydrogen ions (H+) in aqueous solutions form bonds with water molecules to form hydronium ions (H3O+).
2 H2O ==> H3O+ + OH−

pH Equation

The following equation is a fundamental and useful staple of chemistry and can be seen as somewhat of a pH calculator. If you know the pH, you can solve for the hydronium ion concentration and conversely, you can solve for pH if you know the concentration of hydronium ions.

pH = − log [H3O+]
The pH of a solution is equal to the negative logarithm of the hydronium ion (H3O+) concentration.

Example 1: Find pH from [H3O+].

In a 1.0 L sample of 0.1 M hydrochloric acid (HCl) the concentration of hydronium ions is 1 × 10-1. What is the pH?

pH = − log [H3O+]
pH = − log (1 × 10-1 )
pH = − ( − 1)
pH = 1

pH Conversion

Example 2: Find [H3O+] from pH

If the pH of the solution is 4.3. What is the concentration of hydronium ions?

The first step is to rearrange the equation:

[H3O+] = 10−pH
[H3O+] = 10−4.3 [H3O+] = 5.01 × 10-5

Example 3: What if it's a base?

Use the ion-product constant for water (Kw).
Kw = 1 × 10-14 = [H3O+] × [OH]
[H3O+] = (1 × 10-14 ) / [OH-]

What is the pH of a solution if [OH-] = 4.0 x 10-11 M?

Step 1
[H3O+] = (1 × 10-14 ) / [OH-]
[H3O+] = ( 1 × 10-14 ) / (4.0 x 10-11 )
[H3O+] = 0.25 × 10-3

Step 2
pH = − log [H3O+]
pH = − log (0.25 × 10-3 )
pH = − ( − 3.60)
pH = 3.60

Significant Figures

Although the rules for determining significant figures are fairly rigid, calculations for pH are somewhat special in that only the numbers to the right of the decimal are counted as sig figs!

Acid Dissociation Constant (Ka)

The acid dissociation constant is the portion of an acid in the ionized form. Weak acids have small Ka values because the majority of the acid remains undissociated. Carbonic acid is a good example of a weak acid. The equilibrium equation is:

H2CO3 (aq) ↔ HCO3 (aq) + H+ (aq) Ka = 4.3 x 10-7

Since carbonic acid is a diprotic acid, and can donate another H+, the second dissociation equation is:

HCO3(aq) ↔ CO32−(aq) + H+ (aq) Ka = 4.8 x 10-11

Strong acids have large dissociation constants; they completely dissociate in water. Nitric acid is a good example of a strong acid. The equilibrium equation for nitric acid is:

HNO3 (aq) ↔ NO2 + H+ Ka = 40

The Ka value of 40 is substantially more significant than that of carbonic acid, which was 4.3 x 10-7.

Related Articles

How to Find Hydroxide Ion Concentration
How to Calculate Theoretical H3O
How to Solve a Parabola
How to Calculate the pH of Ammonia Water Using KB
How to Calculate the K Value on a Titration Graph
How to Calculate Keq Given pKa
How to Calculate the pH of a Strong Acid
How to Find the PKA of a Weak Acid
How to Do Titration Calculations
How to Calculate Hydrogen Ion Concentration
How to Calculate Kf
How to Find pH for a Given Molarity
How to Calculate End Point
How to Calculate PH of Buffer Solutions
How to Calculate ph And pOH
How to Calculate Percent Dissociation
How to Find the X Intercept of a Function
Brine Vs. Conductivity
How to Calculate Titratable Acidity

Dont Go!

We Have More Great Sciencing Articles!