Previous topic
Acids and Bases
Next topic

9. pH of a Solution of a Weak Base

When a weak acid like NH3 (ammonia) is dissolved in water, only a few NH3-molecules will accept a proton:

NH3(aq) + H2O(l) NH4+(aq) + OH-(aq)


[OH-] , pOH and pH of the solution can be calculated from Kb.

Let us calculate the pH of 0.1 mol/L NH3.

NH3
NH4+
OH-
Beginning
0.1 mol/L
0 mol/L (*)
0 mol/L
D
- x mol/L
+ x mol/L
+ x mol/L
Equilibrium
(0.1 - x) mol/L
x mol/L
x mol/L

(*) The hydroxide ions delivered by the ionization of water are neglected. The weak base NH3 (Kb = 1.8 x 10-5) is much stronger than the weak base H2O (Kb = 1.0 x 10-14).

So we find at equilibrium: [OH-] = 1.3 x 10-3 mol/L pOH = - log 1.3 x 10-3 = 2.88 pOH = 11.12 .

Summary

pH of a solution of a weak base B in water

Calculate the concentrations in the equilibrium state
Calculate pOH
Calculate pH
Previous topic
Back to Acids and Bases
Next topic