Determine the pKa value from the titration curves

AI Thread Summary
Determining the pKa value from titration curves involves identifying the buffer region where the pH changes minimally with added titrant. In this case, the experiment used sodium carbonate as a weak base and HCl as a strong acid, with pH measurements taken after each 1mL increment of acid. The pKa can be found at the midpoint of the flat region of the titration curve, where the slope is small but not zero. The initial concentration of sodium carbonate does not affect the pKa determination because pKa is a property of the acid/base pair, not its concentration. The initial pH of the untitrated sodium carbonate solution is not indicative of the pKa, as weak bases have a pKb instead. The focus should be on the titration data to accurately determine the pKa. Understanding acid-base equilibria is essential for interpreting these results effectively.
Mitchtwitchita
Messages
187
Reaction score
0
This is a topic that I simply know very little about. The question is asking me to determine the pKa value from the titration curves that I graphed in a recent experiment. Although I know the "buffer region," I have no idea how to determine the pKa. The weak base was 1M, 0.75M, 0.50M, and 0.25M of 30mL sodium carbonate and HCl was the strong acid added in increments of 1mL at a time, whereupon a pH was taken. Can anybody please help? I need as much help as I can get at this present time! Also, why doesn't the starting concentration of sodium carbonate affect the determination of the pKa? Is it because it's a base?
 
Chemistry news on Phys.org
The middle of the flat region (might be slope small but not quite zero) of the buffer region gives you the pKa. As for the pH of the untitrated base solution not giving you a pKa value; a weak base has a pKb, not a pKa. The initial pH of the sodium carbonate solution tells you nothing about the results of titration. You must perform the titration and take data points of pH versus titrant volume.

What have you studied so far about acid-base equilibria?
 
Thank you so much for your reply! I've barely studied anything regarding acid/base equilibrium. This was an experiment in biology concerning buffers and I can't say that my chemistry was quite up to snuff. Thanks again Symbolipoint.
 
Back
Top