If the "pH" is 6.49 and the three values of "pK"_a = 2.148, 7.199, 12.15 for phosphoric acid, what species dominates in solution?

1 Answer
Aug 17, 2017

Well, a "pH" below a given "pKa" indicates that the solution is more acidic than the species dissociation to which it corresponds.

"pK"_(a1) harr "H"_3"PO"_4 dissociation

"pK"_(a2) harr "H"_2"PO"_4^(-) dissociation

"pK"_(a3) harr "HPO"_4^(2-) dissociation

As a result, we can say:

  • "pH" < "pK"_(a1) indicates the acidic form of "H"_3"PO"_4 will exist in greater quantity (than the conjugate base).
  • "pK"_(a1) < "pH" < "pK"_(a2) indicates the basic form of "H"_3"PO"_4 (the conjugate base of this), or the acidic form of "HPO"_4^(2-) (the conjugate acid of this), will exist in greater quantity.
  • "pK"_(a2) < "pH" < "pK"_(a3) indicates the basic form of "H"_2PO"_4^(-) will exist in greater quantity than the acidic form, i.e. than "H"_2"PO"_4^(-).
  • "pH" > "pK"_(a3) indicates the most basic form, i.e. the "PO"_4^(3-) species will exist in greater quantity than all that came before.

(We can assume that the remaining species not mentioned in an acid/conjugate base equilibrium are dominated by the main ones mentioned.)

A "pH" between "pK"_(a1) and "pK"_(a2) means the solution is more basic than "H"_3"PO"_4 and more acidic than "HPO"_4^(2-). Thus, we expect that bb("H"_2"PO"_4^(-)) dominates in solution.

And this can be shown mathematically from the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation, as we are still in the buffer region.

"pH" = "pK"_(a1) + log((["H"_2"PO"_4^(-)])/(["H"_3"PO"_4]))

= "pK"_(a2) + log((["HPO"_4^(2-)])/(["H"_2"PO"_4^(-)]))

  • Since "pH" > "pK"_(a1), the first logarithm is positive and ["H"_2"PO"_4^(-)] > ["H"_3"PO"_4] (i.e. the argument is greater than 1).
  • Since "pH" < "pK"_(a2), the second logarithm is negative and ["HPO"_4^(2-)] < ["H"_2"PO"_4^(-)] (i.e. the argument is between 0 and 1).

And we conclude that "H"_2"PO"_4^(-) is the dominant species in solution at this "pH".