pKa Calculator

pKa Calculator

Calculator
Reference Values
About pKa
Please enter a valid pKa value
Please enter a valid pH value (0-14)
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Common pKa Values

Below is a table of common acids and their pKa values:

Acid Formula pKa Acid Strength
Hydroiodic acid HI -10 Strong
Hydrobromic acid HBr -9 Strong
Hydrochloric acid HCl -7 Strong
Sulfuric acid (1st) H₂SO₄ -3 Strong
Nitric acid HNO₃ -1.3 Strong
Hydronium ion H₃O⁺ 0 Strong
Sulfuric acid (2nd) HSO₄⁻ 1.9 Weak
Phosphoric acid (1st) H₃PO₄ 2.1 Weak
Formic acid HCOOH 3.8 Weak
Acetic acid CH₃COOH 4.8 Weak
Carbonic acid (1st) H₂CO₃ 6.4 Weak
Phosphoric acid (2nd) H₂PO₄⁻ 7.2 Weak
Hydrogen sulfide (1st) H₂S 7.0 Weak
Ammonium ion NH₄⁺ 9.2 Weak
Carbonic acid (2nd) HCO₃⁻ 10.3 Weak
Phosphoric acid (3rd) HPO₄²⁻ 12.3 Weak
Phenol C₆H₅OH 10.0 Weak
Hydrogen sulfide (2nd) HS⁻ 12.9 Weak
Water H₂O 15.7 Very Weak
Ethanol C₂H₅OH 16.0 Very Weak
Ammonia NH₃ 38 Extremely Weak
Methane CH₄ 50 Extremely Weak

What is pKa?

The pKa value is a measure of the strength of an acid in solution. It represents the negative logarithm (base 10) of the acid dissociation constant (Ka):

pKa = -log₁₀(Ka)

The pKa value tells us how easily an acid gives up a proton (H⁺). The lower the pKa value, the stronger the acid.

The Significance of pKa

  • Acid Strength: Acids with lower pKa values are stronger (donate protons more readily)
  • pH Calculations: pKa is crucial for calculating pH in buffer solutions
  • Drug Development: pKa affects drug absorption, distribution, and interaction with biological systems
  • Chemical Reactions: pKa helps predict reactivity and equilibrium positions

The Henderson-Hasselbalch Equation

This equation relates pH, pKa, and the concentrations of an acid (HA) and its conjugate base (A⁻):

pH = pKa + log₁₀([A⁻]/[HA])

Buffer Solutions

A buffer solution contains a weak acid and its conjugate base. The best buffers work when:

  • The desired pH is within ±1 unit of the pKa value
  • The concentrations of acid and conjugate base are similar

Temperature Effects

pKa values typically change with temperature. This calculator can account for temperature variations using the van't Hoff equation, which relates the equilibrium constant to temperature.

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