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Buffer solution

A buffer solution is a solution where the pH does not change significantly on dilution or if an acid or base is added at constant temperature.[1] Its pH changes very little when a small amount of strong acid or base is added to it. Buffer solutions are used as a means of keeping pH at a nearly constant value in a wide variety of chemical applications. In nature, there are many living systems that use buffering for pH regulation. For example, the bicarbonate buffering system is used to regulate the pH of blood, and bicarbonate also acts as a buffer in the ocean.

Principles of buffering edit

 
Figure 1. Simulated titration of an acidified solution of a weak acid (pKa = 4.7) with alkali

Buffer solutions resist pH change because of a chemical equilibrium between the weak acid HA and its conjugate base A:

HA ⇌ H+ + A

When some strong acid is added to an equilibrium mixture of the weak acid and its conjugate base, hydrogen ions (H+) are added, and the equilibrium is shifted to the left, in accordance with Le Chatelier's principle. Because of this, the hydrogen ion concentration increases by less than the amount expected for the quantity of strong acid added. Similarly, if strong alkali is added to the mixture, the hydrogen ion concentration decreases by less than the amount expected for the quantity of alkali added. In Figure 1, the effect is illustrated by the simulated titration of a weak acid with pKa = 4.7. The relative concentration of undissociated acid is shown in blue, and of its conjugate base in red. The pH changes relatively slowly in the buffer region, pH = pKa ± 1, centered at pH = 4.7, where [HA] = [A]. The hydrogen ion concentration decreases by less than the amount expected because most of the added hydroxide ion is consumed in the reaction

OH + HA → H2O + A

and only a little is consumed in the neutralization reaction (which is the reaction that results in an increase in pH)

OH + H+ → H2O.

Once the acid is more than 95% deprotonated, the pH rises rapidly because most of the added alkali is consumed in the neutralization reaction.

Buffer capacity edit

Buffer capacity is a quantitative measure of the resistance to change of pH of a solution containing a buffering agent with respect to a change of acid or alkali concentration. It can be defined as follows:[2][3]

 
where   is an infinitesimal amount of added base, or
 
where   is an infinitesimal amount of added acid. pH is defined as −log10[H+], and d(pH) is an infinitesimal change in pH.

With either definition the buffer capacity for a weak acid HA with dissociation constant Ka can be expressed as[4][5][3]

 
where [H+] is the concentration of hydrogen ions, and   is the total concentration of added acid. Kw is the equilibrium constant for self-ionization of water, equal to 1.0×10−14. Note that in solution H+ exists as the hydronium ion H3O+, and further aquation of the hydronium ion has negligible effect on the dissociation equilibrium, except at very high acid concentration.
 
Figure 2. Buffer capacity β for a 0.1 M solution of a weak acid with a pKa = 7

This equation shows that there are three regions of raised buffer capacity (see figure 2).

  • In the central region of the curve (coloured green on the plot), the second term is dominant, and
     
    Buffer capacity rises to a local maximum at pH = pKa. The height of this peak depends on the value of pKa. Buffer capacity is negligible when the concentration [HA] of buffering agent is very small and increases with increasing concentration of the buffering agent.[3] Some authors show only this region in graphs of buffer capacity.[2]
    Buffer capacity falls to 33% of the maximum value at pH = pKa ± 1, to 10% at pH = pKa ± 1.5 and to 1% at pH = pKa ± 2. For this reason the most useful range is approximately pKa ± 1. When choosing a buffer for use at a specific pH, it should have a pKa value as close as possible to that pH.[2]
  • With strongly acidic solutions, pH less than about 2 (coloured red on the plot), the first term in the equation dominates, and buffer capacity rises exponentially with decreasing pH:
     
    This results from the fact that the second and third terms become negligible at very low pH. This term is independent of the presence or absence of a buffering agent.
  • With strongly alkaline solutions, pH more than about 12 (coloured blue on the plot), the third term in the equation dominates, and buffer capacity rises exponentially with increasing pH:
     
    This results from the fact that the first and second terms become negligible at very high pH. This term is also independent of the presence or absence of a buffering agent.

Applications of buffers edit

The pH of a solution containing a buffering agent can only vary within a narrow range, regardless of what else may be present in the solution. In biological systems this is an essential condition for enzymes to function correctly. For example, in human blood a mixture of carbonic acid (H
2
CO
3
) and bicarbonate (HCO
3
) is present in the plasma fraction; this constitutes the major mechanism for maintaining the pH of blood between 7.35 and 7.45. Outside this narrow range (7.40 ± 0.05 pH unit), acidosis and alkalosis metabolic conditions rapidly develop, ultimately leading to death if the correct buffering capacity is not rapidly restored.

If the pH value of a solution rises or falls too much, the effectiveness of an enzyme decreases in a process, known as denaturation, which is usually irreversible.[6] The majority of biological samples that are used in research are kept in a buffer solution, often phosphate buffered saline (PBS) at pH 7.4.

In industry, buffering agents are used in fermentation processes and in setting the correct conditions for dyes used in colouring fabrics. They are also used in chemical analysis[5] and calibration of pH meters.

Simple buffering agents edit

Buffering agent pKa Useful pH range
Citric acid 3.13, 4.76, 6.40 2.1–7.4
Acetic acid 4.8 3.8–5.8
KH2PO4 7.2 6.2–8.2
CHES 9.3 8.3–10.3
Borate 9.24 8.25–10.25

For buffers in acid regions, the pH may be adjusted to a desired value by adding a strong acid such as hydrochloric acid to the particular buffering agent. For alkaline buffers, a strong base such as sodium hydroxide may be added. Alternatively, a buffer mixture can be made from a mixture of an acid and its conjugate base. For example, an acetate buffer can be made from a mixture of acetic acid and sodium acetate. Similarly, an alkaline buffer can be made from a mixture of the base and its conjugate acid.

"Universal" buffer mixtures edit

By combining substances with pKa values differing by only two or less and adjusting the pH, a wide range of buffers can be obtained. Citric acid is a useful component of a buffer mixture because it has three pKa values, separated by less than two. The buffer range can be extended by adding other buffering agents. The following mixtures (McIlvaine's buffer solutions) have a buffer range of pH 3 to 8.[7]

0.2 M Na2HPO4 (mL) 0.1 M citric acid (mL) pH
20.55 79.45 3.0
38.55 61.45 4.0
51.50 48.50 5.0
63.15 36.85 6.0
82.35 17.65 7.0
97.25 2.75 8.0

A mixture containing citric acid, monopotassium phosphate, boric acid, and diethyl barbituric acid can be made to cover the pH range 2.6 to 12.[8]

Other universal buffers are the Carmody buffer[9] and the Britton–Robinson buffer, developed in 1931.

Common buffer compounds used in biology edit

For effective range see Buffer capacity, above. Also see Good's buffers for the historic design principles and favourable properties of these buffer substances in biochemical applications.

Common name (chemical name) Structure pKa,
25 °C
Temp. effect,
dpH/dT (K−1)[10]
Mol.
weight
TAPS,
([tris(hydroxymethyl)methylamino]propanesulfonic acid)
  8.43 −0.018 243.3
Bicine,
(2-(bis(2-hydroxyethyl)amino)acetic acid)
  8.35 −0.018 163.2
Tris,
(tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane, or
2-amino-2-(hydroxymethyl)propane-1,3-diol)
  8.07[a] −0.028 121.14
Tricine,
(N-[tris(hydroxymethyl)methyl]glycine)
  8.05 −0.021 179.2
TAPSO,
(3-[N-tris(hydroxymethyl)methylamino]-2-hydroxypropanesulfonic acid)
  7.635 259.3
HEPES,
(4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid)
  7.48 −0.014 238.3
TES,
(2-[[1,3-dihydroxy-2-(hydroxymethyl)propan-2-yl]amino]ethanesulfonic acid)
  7.40 −0.020 229.20
MOPS,
(3-(N-morpholino)propanesulfonic acid)
  7.20 −0.015 209.3
PIPES,
(piperazine-N,N′-bis(2-ethanesulfonic acid))
  6.76 −0.008 302.4
Cacodylate,
(dimethylarsenic acid)
  6.27 138.0
MES,
(2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid)
  6.15 −0.011 195.2
  1. ^ Tris is a base, the pKa = 8.07 refers to its conjugate acid.

Calculating buffer pH edit

Monoprotic acids edit

First write down the equilibrium expression

HA ⇌ A + H+

This shows that when the acid dissociates, equal amounts of hydrogen ion and anion are produced. The equilibrium concentrations of these three components can be calculated in an ICE table (ICE standing for "initial, change, equilibrium").

ICE table for a monoprotic acid
[HA] [A] [H+]
I C0 0 y
C x x x
E C0x x x + y

The first row, labelled I, lists the initial conditions: the concentration of acid is C0, initially undissociated, so the concentrations of A and H+ would be zero; y is the initial concentration of added strong acid, such as hydrochloric acid. If strong alkali, such as sodium hydroxide, is added, then y will have a negative sign because alkali removes hydrogen ions from the solution. The second row, labelled C for "change", specifies the changes that occur when the acid dissociates. The acid concentration decreases by an amount −x, and the concentrations of A and H+ both increase by an amount +x. This follows from the equilibrium expression. The third row, labelled E for "equilibrium", adds together the first two rows and shows the concentrations at equilibrium.

To find x, use the formula for the equilibrium constant in terms of concentrations:

 

Substitute the concentrations with the values found in the last row of the ICE table:

 

Simplify to

 

With specific values for C0, Ka and y, this equation can be solved for x. Assuming that pH = −log10[H+], the pH can be calculated as pH = −log10(x + y).

Polyprotic acids edit

 
% species formation calculated for a 10-millimolar solution of citric acid

Polyprotic acids are acids that can lose more than one proton. The constant for dissociation of the first proton may be denoted as Ka1, and the constants for dissociation of successive protons as Ka2, etc. Citric acid is an example of a polyprotic acid H3A, as it can lose three protons.

Stepwise dissociation constants
Equilibrium Citric acid
H3A ⇌ H2A + H+ pKa1 = 3.13
H2A ⇌ HA2− + H+ pKa2 = 4.76
HA2− ⇌ A3− + H+ pKa3 = 6.40

When the difference between successive pKa values is less than about 3, there is overlap between the pH range of existence of the species in equilibrium. The smaller the difference, the more the overlap. In the case of citric acid, the overlap is extensive and solutions of citric acid are buffered over the whole range of pH 2.5 to 7.5.

Calculation of the pH with a polyprotic acid requires a speciation calculation to be performed. In the case of citric acid, this entails the solution of the two equations of mass balance:

 

CA is the analytical concentration of the acid, CH is the analytical concentration of added hydrogen ions, βq are the cumulative association constants. Kw is the constant for self-ionization of water. There are two non-linear simultaneous equations in two unknown quantities [A3−] and [H+]. Many computer programs are available to do this calculation. The speciation diagram for citric acid was produced with the program HySS.[11]

N.B. The numbering of cumulative, overall constants is the reverse of the numbering of the stepwise, dissociation constants.

Relationship between cumulative association constant (β) values and stepwise dissociation constant (K) values for a tribasic acid.
Equilibrium Relationship
A3− + H+ ⇌ AH2+ Log β1= pka3
A3− + 2H+ ⇌ AH2+ Log β2 =pka2 + pka3
A3− + 3H+⇌ AH3 Log β3 = pka1 + pka2 + pka3

Cumulative association constants are used in general-purpose computer programs such as the one used to obtain the speciation diagram above.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ J. Gordon Betts (25 April 2013). "Inorganic compounds essential to human functioning". Anatomy and Physiology. OpenStax. ISBN 978-1-947172-04-3. Retrieved 14 May 2023.
  2. ^ a b c Skoog, Douglas A.; West, Donald M.; Holler, F. James; Crouch, Stanley R. (2014). Fundamentals of Analytical Chemistry (9th ed.). Brooks/Cole. p. 226. ISBN 978-0-495-55828-6.
  3. ^ a b c Urbansky, Edward T.; Schock, Michael R. (2000). "Understanding, Deriving and Computing Buffer Capacity". Journal of Chemical Education. 77 (12): 1640–1644. Bibcode:2000JChEd..77.1640U. doi:10.1021/ed077p1640.
  4. ^ Butler, J. N. (1998). Ionic Equilibrium: Solubility and pH calculations. Wiley. pp. 133–136. ISBN 978-0-471-58526-8.
  5. ^ a b Hulanicki, A. (1987). Reactions of acids and bases in analytical chemistry. Translated by Masson, Mary R. Horwood. ISBN 978-0-85312-330-9.
  6. ^ Scorpio, R. (2000). Fundamentals of Acids, Bases, Buffers & Their Application to Biochemical Systems. ISBN 978-0-7872-7374-3.
  7. ^ McIlvaine, T. C. (1921). "A buffer solution for colorimetric comparaison" (PDF). J. Biol. Chem. 49 (1): 183–186. doi:10.1016/S0021-9258(18)86000-8. (PDF) from the original on 2015-02-26.
  8. ^ Mendham, J.; Denny, R. C.; Barnes, J. D.; Thomas, M. (2000). "Appendix 5". Vogel's textbook of quantitative chemical analysis (5th ed.). Harlow: Pearson Education. ISBN 978-0-582-22628-9.
  9. ^ Carmody, Walter R. (1961). "Easily prepared wide range buffer series". J. Chem. Educ. 38 (11): 559–560. Bibcode:1961JChEd..38..559C. doi:10.1021/ed038p559.
  10. ^ "Buffer Reference Center". Sigma-Aldrich. from the original on 2009-04-17. Retrieved 2009-04-17.
  11. ^ Alderighi, L.; Gans, P.; Ienco, A.; Peters, D.; Sabatini, A.; Vacca, A. (1999). "Hyperquad simulation and speciation (HySS): a utility program for the investigation of equilibria involving soluble and partially soluble species". Coordination Chemistry Reviews. 184 (1): 311–318. doi:10.1016/S0010-8545(98)00260-4. from the original on 2007-07-04.

External links edit

"Biological buffers". REACH Devices.

buffer, solution, buffer, solution, solution, where, does, change, significantly, dilution, acid, base, added, constant, temperature, changes, very, little, when, small, amount, strong, acid, base, added, used, means, keeping, nearly, constant, value, wide, va. A buffer solution is a solution where the pH does not change significantly on dilution or if an acid or base is added at constant temperature 1 Its pH changes very little when a small amount of strong acid or base is added to it Buffer solutions are used as a means of keeping pH at a nearly constant value in a wide variety of chemical applications In nature there are many living systems that use buffering for pH regulation For example the bicarbonate buffering system is used to regulate the pH of blood and bicarbonate also acts as a buffer in the ocean Contents 1 Principles of buffering 1 1 Buffer capacity 2 Applications of buffers 2 1 Simple buffering agents 2 2 Universal buffer mixtures 2 3 Common buffer compounds used in biology 3 Calculating buffer pH 3 1 Monoprotic acids 3 2 Polyprotic acids 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksPrinciples of buffering edit nbsp Figure 1 Simulated titration of an acidified solution of a weak acid pKa 4 7 with alkaliBuffer solutions resist pH change because of a chemical equilibrium between the weak acid HA and its conjugate base A HA H A When some strong acid is added to an equilibrium mixture of the weak acid and its conjugate base hydrogen ions H are added and the equilibrium is shifted to the left in accordance with Le Chatelier s principle Because of this the hydrogen ion concentration increases by less than the amount expected for the quantity of strong acid added Similarly if strong alkali is added to the mixture the hydrogen ion concentration decreases by less than the amount expected for the quantity of alkali added In Figure 1 the effect is illustrated by the simulated titration of a weak acid with pKa 4 7 The relative concentration of undissociated acid is shown in blue and of its conjugate base in red The pH changes relatively slowly in the buffer region pH pKa 1 centered at pH 4 7 where HA A The hydrogen ion concentration decreases by less than the amount expected because most of the added hydroxide ion is consumed in the reaction OH HA H2O A and only a little is consumed in the neutralization reaction which is the reaction that results in an increase in pH OH H H2O Once the acid is more than 95 deprotonated the pH rises rapidly because most of the added alkali is consumed in the neutralization reaction Buffer capacity edit Buffer capacity is a quantitative measure of the resistance to change of pH of a solution containing a buffering agent with respect to a change of acid or alkali concentration It can be defined as follows 2 3 b d C b d p H displaystyle beta frac dC b d mathrm pH nbsp where d C b displaystyle dC b nbsp is an infinitesimal amount of added base or b d C a d p H displaystyle beta frac dC a d mathrm pH nbsp where d C a displaystyle dC a nbsp is an infinitesimal amount of added acid pH is defined as log10 H and d pH is an infinitesimal change in pH With either definition the buffer capacity for a weak acid HA with dissociation constant Ka can be expressed as 4 5 3 b 2 303 H T HA K a H K a H 2 K w H displaystyle beta 2 303 left ce H frac T ce HA K a ce H K a ce H 2 frac K text w ce H right nbsp where H is the concentration of hydrogen ions and T HA displaystyle T text HA nbsp is the total concentration of added acid Kw is the equilibrium constant for self ionization of water equal to 1 0 10 14 Note that in solution H exists as the hydronium ion H3O and further aquation of the hydronium ion has negligible effect on the dissociation equilibrium except at very high acid concentration nbsp Figure 2 Buffer capacity b for a 0 1 M solution of a weak acid with a pKa 7This equation shows that there are three regions of raised buffer capacity see figure 2 In the central region of the curve coloured green on the plot the second term is dominant and b 2 303 T HA K a H K a H 2 displaystyle beta approx 2 303 frac T ce HA K a ce H K a ce H 2 nbsp Buffer capacity rises to a local maximum at pH pKa The height of this peak depends on the value of pKa Buffer capacity is negligible when the concentration HA of buffering agent is very small and increases with increasing concentration of the buffering agent 3 Some authors show only this region in graphs of buffer capacity 2 Buffer capacity falls to 33 of the maximum value at pH pKa 1 to 10 at pH pKa 1 5 and to 1 at pH pKa 2 For this reason the most useful range is approximately pKa 1 When choosing a buffer for use at a specific pH it should have a pKa value as close as possible to that pH 2 With strongly acidic solutions pH less than about 2 coloured red on the plot the first term in the equation dominates and buffer capacity rises exponentially with decreasing pH b 10 p H displaystyle beta approx 10 mathrm pH nbsp This results from the fact that the second and third terms become negligible at very low pH This term is independent of the presence or absence of a buffering agent With strongly alkaline solutions pH more than about 12 coloured blue on the plot the third term in the equation dominates and buffer capacity rises exponentially with increasing pH b 10 p H p K w displaystyle beta approx 10 mathrm pH mathrm p K text w nbsp This results from the fact that the first and second terms become negligible at very high pH This term is also independent of the presence or absence of a buffering agent Applications of buffers editThe pH of a solution containing a buffering agent can only vary within a narrow range regardless of what else may be present in the solution In biological systems this is an essential condition for enzymes to function correctly For example in human blood a mixture of carbonic acid H2 CO3 and bicarbonate HCO 3 is present in the plasma fraction this constitutes the major mechanism for maintaining the pH of blood between 7 35 and 7 45 Outside this narrow range 7 40 0 05 pH unit acidosis and alkalosis metabolic conditions rapidly develop ultimately leading to death if the correct buffering capacity is not rapidly restored If the pH value of a solution rises or falls too much the effectiveness of an enzyme decreases in a process known as denaturation which is usually irreversible 6 The majority of biological samples that are used in research are kept in a buffer solution often phosphate buffered saline PBS at pH 7 4 In industry buffering agents are used in fermentation processes and in setting the correct conditions for dyes used in colouring fabrics They are also used in chemical analysis 5 and calibration of pH meters Simple buffering agents edit Buffering agent pKa Useful pH rangeCitric acid 3 13 4 76 6 40 2 1 7 4Acetic acid 4 8 3 8 5 8KH2PO4 7 2 6 2 8 2CHES 9 3 8 3 10 3Borate 9 24 8 25 10 25For buffers in acid regions the pH may be adjusted to a desired value by adding a strong acid such as hydrochloric acid to the particular buffering agent For alkaline buffers a strong base such as sodium hydroxide may be added Alternatively a buffer mixture can be made from a mixture of an acid and its conjugate base For example an acetate buffer can be made from a mixture of acetic acid and sodium acetate Similarly an alkaline buffer can be made from a mixture of the base and its conjugate acid Universal buffer mixtures edit By combining substances with pKa values differing by only two or less and adjusting the pH a wide range of buffers can be obtained Citric acid is a useful component of a buffer mixture because it has three pKa values separated by less than two The buffer range can be extended by adding other buffering agents The following mixtures McIlvaine s buffer solutions have a buffer range of pH 3 to 8 7 0 2 M Na2HPO4 mL 0 1 M citric acid mL pH20 55 79 45 3 038 55 61 45 4 051 50 48 50 5 063 15 36 85 6 082 35 17 65 7 097 25 2 75 8 0A mixture containing citric acid monopotassium phosphate boric acid and diethyl barbituric acid can be made to cover the pH range 2 6 to 12 8 Other universal buffers are the Carmody buffer 9 and the Britton Robinson buffer developed in 1931 Common buffer compounds used in biology edit For effective range see Buffer capacity above Also see Good s buffers for the historic design principles and favourable properties of these buffer substances in biochemical applications Common name chemical name Structure pKa 25 C Temp effect dpH dT K 1 10 Mol weightTAPS tris hydroxymethyl methylamino propanesulfonic acid nbsp 8 43 0 018 243 3Bicine 2 bis 2 hydroxyethyl amino acetic acid nbsp 8 35 0 018 163 2Tris tris hydroxymethyl aminomethane or 2 amino 2 hydroxymethyl propane 1 3 diol nbsp 8 07 a 0 028 121 14Tricine N tris hydroxymethyl methyl glycine nbsp 8 05 0 021 179 2TAPSO 3 N tris hydroxymethyl methylamino 2 hydroxypropanesulfonic acid nbsp 7 635 259 3HEPES 4 2 hydroxyethyl 1 piperazineethanesulfonic acid nbsp 7 48 0 014 238 3TES 2 1 3 dihydroxy 2 hydroxymethyl propan 2 yl amino ethanesulfonic acid nbsp 7 40 0 020 229 20MOPS 3 N morpholino propanesulfonic acid nbsp 7 20 0 015 209 3PIPES piperazine N N bis 2 ethanesulfonic acid nbsp 6 76 0 008 302 4Cacodylate dimethylarsenic acid nbsp 6 27 138 0MES 2 N morpholino ethanesulfonic acid nbsp 6 15 0 011 195 2 Tris is a base the pKa 8 07 refers to its conjugate acid Calculating buffer pH editMonoprotic acids edit First write down the equilibrium expression HA A H This shows that when the acid dissociates equal amounts of hydrogen ion and anion are produced The equilibrium concentrations of these three components can be calculated in an ICE table ICE standing for initial change equilibrium ICE table for a monoprotic acid HA A H I C0 0 yC x x xE C0 x x x yThe first row labelled I lists the initial conditions the concentration of acid is C0 initially undissociated so the concentrations of A and H would be zero y is the initial concentration of added strong acid such as hydrochloric acid If strong alkali such as sodium hydroxide is added then y will have a negative sign because alkali removes hydrogen ions from the solution The second row labelled C for change specifies the changes that occur when the acid dissociates The acid concentration decreases by an amount x and the concentrations of A and H both increase by an amount x This follows from the equilibrium expression The third row labelled E for equilibrium adds together the first two rows and shows the concentrations at equilibrium To find x use the formula for the equilibrium constant in terms of concentrations K a H A HA displaystyle K text a frac ce H ce A ce HA nbsp Substitute the concentrations with the values found in the last row of the ICE table K a x x y C 0 x displaystyle K text a frac x x y C 0 x nbsp Simplify tox 2 K a y x K a C 0 0 displaystyle x 2 K text a y x K text a C 0 0 nbsp With specific values for C0 Ka and y this equation can be solved for x Assuming that pH log10 H the pH can be calculated as pH log10 x y Polyprotic acids edit nbsp species formation calculated for a 10 millimolar solution of citric acidPolyprotic acids are acids that can lose more than one proton The constant for dissociation of the first proton may be denoted as Ka1 and the constants for dissociation of successive protons as Ka2 etc Citric acid is an example of a polyprotic acid H3A as it can lose three protons Stepwise dissociation constants Equilibrium Citric acidH3A H2A H pKa1 3 13H2A HA2 H pKa2 4 76HA2 A3 H pKa3 6 40When the difference between successive pKa values is less than about 3 there is overlap between the pH range of existence of the species in equilibrium The smaller the difference the more the overlap In the case of citric acid the overlap is extensive and solutions of citric acid are buffered over the whole range of pH 2 5 to 7 5 Calculation of the pH with a polyprotic acid requires a speciation calculation to be performed In the case of citric acid this entails the solution of the two equations of mass balance C A A 3 b 1 A 3 H b 2 A 3 H 2 b 3 A 3 H 3 C H H b 1 A 3 H 2 b 2 A 3 H 2 3 b 3 A 3 H 3 K w H 1 displaystyle begin aligned C ce A amp ce A 3 beta 1 ce A 3 ce H beta 2 ce A 3 ce H 2 beta 3 ce A 3 ce H 3 C ce H amp ce H beta 1 ce A 3 ce H 2 beta 2 ce A 3 ce H 2 3 beta 3 ce A 3 ce H 3 K text w ce H 1 end aligned nbsp CA is the analytical concentration of the acid CH is the analytical concentration of added hydrogen ions bq are the cumulative association constants Kw is the constant for self ionization of water There are two non linear simultaneous equations in two unknown quantities A3 and H Many computer programs are available to do this calculation The speciation diagram for citric acid was produced with the program HySS 11 N B The numbering of cumulative overall constants is the reverse of the numbering of the stepwise dissociation constants Relationship between cumulative association constant b values and stepwise dissociation constant K values for a tribasic acid Equilibrium RelationshipA3 H AH2 Log b1 pka3A3 2H AH2 Log b2 pka2 pka3A3 3H AH3 Log b3 pka1 pka2 pka3Cumulative association constants are used in general purpose computer programs such as the one used to obtain the speciation diagram above See also editHenderson Hasselbalch equation Buffering agent Good s buffers Common ion effect Metal ion buffer Mineral redox bufferReferences edit J Gordon Betts 25 April 2013 Inorganic compounds essential to human functioning Anatomy and Physiology OpenStax ISBN 978 1 947172 04 3 Retrieved 14 May 2023 a b c Skoog Douglas A West Donald M Holler F James Crouch Stanley R 2014 Fundamentals of Analytical Chemistry 9th ed Brooks Cole p 226 ISBN 978 0 495 55828 6 a b c Urbansky Edward T Schock Michael R 2000 Understanding Deriving and Computing Buffer Capacity Journal of Chemical Education 77 12 1640 1644 Bibcode 2000JChEd 77 1640U doi 10 1021 ed077p1640 Butler J N 1998 Ionic Equilibrium Solubility and pH calculations Wiley pp 133 136 ISBN 978 0 471 58526 8 a b Hulanicki A 1987 Reactions of acids and bases in analytical chemistry Translated by Masson Mary R Horwood ISBN 978 0 85312 330 9 Scorpio R 2000 Fundamentals of Acids Bases Buffers amp Their Application to Biochemical Systems ISBN 978 0 7872 7374 3 McIlvaine T C 1921 A buffer solution for colorimetric comparaison PDF J Biol Chem 49 1 183 186 doi 10 1016 S0021 9258 18 86000 8 Archived PDF from the original on 2015 02 26 Mendham J Denny R C Barnes J D Thomas M 2000 Appendix 5 Vogel s textbook of quantitative chemical analysis 5th ed Harlow Pearson Education ISBN 978 0 582 22628 9 Carmody Walter R 1961 Easily prepared wide range buffer series J Chem Educ 38 11 559 560 Bibcode 1961JChEd 38 559C doi 10 1021 ed038p559 Buffer Reference Center Sigma Aldrich Archived from the original on 2009 04 17 Retrieved 2009 04 17 Alderighi L Gans P Ienco A Peters D Sabatini A Vacca A 1999 Hyperquad simulation and speciation HySS a utility program for the investigation of equilibria involving soluble and partially soluble species Coordination Chemistry Reviews 184 1 311 318 doi 10 1016 S0010 8545 98 00260 4 Archived from the original on 2007 07 04 External links edit Biological buffers REACH Devices Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Buffer solution amp oldid 1207165737 Buffer capacity, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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