pH Curves (AQA A Level Chemistry)
Revision Note
pH Curves
During a titration a pH meter can be used and a pH curve plotted
A pH curve is a graph showing how the pH of a solution changes as the acid (or base) is added
The result is characteristically shaped graph which can yield useful information about how the particular acid and alkali react together with stoichiometric information
The features of a pH curve
All pH curves show an s-shape curve and the midpoint of the inflection is called the equivalence or stochiometric point
From the curves you can
Determine the pH of the acid by looking where the curve starts on the y-axis
Find the pH at the equivalence point
Find volume of base at the equivalence point
Obtain the range of pH at the vertical section of the curve
Four types of acid-base titrations
There are four combinations of acids and alkalis that you should know about:
strong acid + strong base
weak acid + strong base
strong acid + weak base
weak acid + weak base
pH curves for the four types of acid-base titrations
Without titles for the graph you can easily recognise which combination is shown by looking at the starting and ending pH and deducing whether the acid and alkali are strong or weak
Sometimes you may see pH titration curves which show pH plotted against volume of acid added
This produces the mirror image graph from which you can get all the same information
Comparing different versions of pH titration curves
Examiner Tips and Tricks
The word base and alkali are being used interchangeably here, but you should know an alkali is a soluble base.Since we are dealing with titrations here, the bases are always in solution so they are also alkalis.
Choosing an Indicator
An acid-base indicator is a weak acid which dissociates to give an anion of a different colour
Consider a weak acid HIn:
HIn (aq) + H2O (l) ⇌ H3O+ (aq) + In- (aq)
colour 1 colour 2
HIn and its conjugate base In- are different colours
The colour of the solution depends on the relative concentrations of the two species
If the solution is acidic, the above equilibrium will be shifted to the left and more HIn will be present
Colour 1 will thus dominate
If the solution is alkaline, the above equilibrium will shift to the right and more In- will be present
Colour 2 will thus dominate
The colour of the indicator thus depends on the pH of the solution
The colour will not change suddenly at a certain pH, but will change gradually over a pH range
The colour of the indicator depends on the ratio of [HIn] to [In-]
The pH at which these transitions will occur depends on the Ka of the indicator
The endpoint of the reaction is where there is a balance between [HIn] and [In-]. At this point these two concentrations are equal
Taking negative logs of both sides:
pKa = pH
This means the pKa of an indicator is the same as the pH of its endpoint
Common Indicators and their colours table
Choosing a suitable indicator
Around the equivalence point of a titration, the pH changes very rapidly
Indicators change colour over a narrow pH range approximately centred around the pKa of the indicator
An indicator will be appropriate for a titration if the pH range of the indicator falls within the rapid pH change for that titration
Strong acid-strong base
In strong acid - strong base titrations, the pH changes from 4 to 10 at the end-point so a suitable indicator must change colour within this range
Methyl red and phenolphthalein are suitable indicators for these titrations
Methyl orange is not ideal but it shows a significant enough colour change at the end point so is widely used
Weak acid-strong base
In weak acid - strong base titrations, the pH changes from 7 to 10 at the end-point so a suitable indicator must change colour within this range
Phenolphthalein is the only suitable indicator for weak acid - strong base titrations that is widely available
Strong acid-weak base
In strong acid - weak base titrations, the pH changes from 4 to 7 at the end-point so a suitable indicator must change colour within this range
Methyl red is the most suitable indicator for these titrations
However methyl orange is often used since it shows a significant enough colour change at the end-point and is more widely available than methyl red
Weak acid-weak base
In weak acid -weak alkali titrations, there is no sudden pH change at the end-point and thus there are no suitable indicators for these titrations
The end-points of these titrations cannot be easily determined
The overlay on the graph shows that both phenolphthalein and methyl orange would change colour outside the point of inflection in a weak acid-weak base titration so they would not be able to show the equivalence point of the titration
Examiner Tips and Tricks
Although many people often use the term end point and equivalence point for the end of a titration, they are not in fact the same thing. The end point refers to the change in colour of the indicator whereas the equivalence point is the volume of base required to exactly neutralise the acid (or acid if starting with the base).
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