Chemistry The Importance of pKa in Determining Activity: A Brief Overview

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The discussion emphasizes the significance of pKa in understanding enzyme activity and its relationship with pH. It highlights that at pH equal to pKa, the concentrations of ionic forms are balanced, while shifts in pH influence their relative concentrations. Participants note that enzyme activity graphs can resemble titration curves, but not all follow this pattern, with some exhibiting bell-shaped curves. There is skepticism regarding the accuracy and completeness of the provided data, as well as the need for clearer graphical representation and experimental context. Overall, the conversation underscores the complexity of pH effects on enzyme activity and the necessity for precise data and models in analysis.
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Homework Statement
Explain why the pka important to activity can be determined from the point of inflection of the graph
Relevant Equations
ph=pka
My explanation is : for ph=pka , the number of two ionic forms[A-] and [HA] are equal,
then, for ph>pka,[A-]>[HA], the gratient gets smaller when ph is increased,
and also, for ph<pka, [A-]<[HA], the slope is becoming larger when pH is increasing .

Would u like to have a look of my explanation please.
 
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Point of inflection of what graph?
 
a ph vs enzyme activity graph, thanks
 
In agreement with Borek, the question is almost meaningless if you don't show the graph.

However I can psych that your curve looks similar to a titration curve.

Not all pH vs enzyme activity graphs look like a titration curve. They can look like two titration curves, back to back, or frequently a "bell shaped curve".

You asked us to have a look at your explanation. Assuming it looks like a titration curve I would say your explanation is not an explanation, it is a restatement.

Not just enzyme activity, but plots of many parameters that vary according to pH, for example optical absorbance (extinction coefficient) at constant wavelength, plot like a titration curve. Can you say why?

An ordinary titration curve has this same characteristic that the slope is maximum at the halfway point where pH = pK. So the main thing is if you can explain that. I don't think you can do it without bit of mathematical formulation.
 
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As my graph has shown, my explanation is : the point of inflection is at the half of the maximum slope, where pH=pKa?
 
Can you explain where this question comes from? Are these your own experiments?
The diagram is lacking even a horizontal pH scale. One would need that to even speculate.
We would need more detail but I doubt somehow that your data is accurate enough to be able to call that point a point of inflection.
The curve is not symmetrical, and I think that alone implies you'd need a model with at least three ionising groups. I doubt your data is good or extensive enough to get far with analysing that.
It would also be helpful if we knew what the system, the reaction, the measurement method is.
 
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