Significance of PH Pka and PKB
Significance of PH Pka and PKB
Significance of PH Pka and PKB
pKb, and Kb
• pH, pKa, pKb, Ka, and Kb are used in chemistry to describe
how acidic or basic a solution is and to gauge the strength of
acids and bases. The pH scale is the most familiar measure of
acidity and basicity, but pKa, pKb, Ka, and Kb are better for
predicting acid and base strength and their reactions. Here
are definitions of each term, simple formulas used to
calculate them, and an explanation of how they differ from
one another.
• Ka=2
• Ka=10
What the “p” and “K” Mean
HA + H2 O ⇆ A– + H3 O+
HA ⇆ A– + H+
Where:
Ka = [H+][A-]/ [HA]
pKa = – log Ka ka= 10-2
Pka =- log 10-14
Pka= -(-14)log 10
Pka=14(1)
Pka=14
Pka =2 log10=1
A large Ka value indicates a strong acid because it means an acid largely dissociates into its ions.
A large Ka value also means the reaction arrow favors the formation of production. In contrast,
a small Ka value means only a small amount of acid dissociates, indicating a weak acid.
A small Ka value means the reaction favors the reactants rather than the products.
Most weak acids have Ka values between 10-2 to 10-14.pKa gives the same information,
but in a different way. The smaller the pKa value, the stronger the acid.
pKb and Kb
• Kb is the base dissociation constant and pKb is the -log of this
constant. A base dissociates according to the general equation:
BOH+ H2O ⇆ B+ + OH–
• Where:
Kb = [B+][OH-]/[BOH]
pKb = -log Kb
• The base dissociation constants are interpreted just like the acid
dissociation constants. A large Kb value means a base has largely
dissociated and indicates a strong base. A small pKb value
indicates a strong base, while a large pKb value indicates a weak
base.
• pKa and pKb are related using a simple equation:
pKa + pKb = 14