Are pH and pOH related to each other?

1 Answer
May 7, 2016

Absolutely! In water:

pH + pOH = 14

Explanation:

We know that water undergoes autoprotolysis:

2H_2O rightleftharpoons H_3O^+ + HO^-

This is an equilibrium reaction, measured precisely over a range of temperatures. It is a fact that at 298K,

[H_3O^+][HO^-] = 10^(-14) ([H_2O] is treated as a constant!). Now this is a mathematical equation, which I can manipulate, as long as I do the same thing to both sides.

Taking log_10 of both sides:

log_10[H_3O^+] + log_10[HO^-] = -14

On rearrangement,

14 = -log_10[H_3O^+] - log_10[HO^-]

But by definition, -log_10[H_3O^+] = pH, and log_10[HO^-] =pOH.

So pH + pOH = 14