Ka from pH and Molarity Calculator
Quickly calculate the acid dissociation constant (Ka) of a monoprotic weak acid from measured pH and initial molarity. This calculator uses the exact equilibrium relationship for HA ⇌ H+ + A–.
Enter the measured pH of the weak acid solution.
This is the starting concentration of HA before dissociation.
Optional label used in the result summary and chart.
Choose how Ka values are displayed.
Ka depends on temperature. This note helps you document the measurement context.
Results
Enter pH and initial molarity, then click Calculate Ka to see the acid dissociation constant, pKa, percent ionization, and equilibrium concentrations.
How to calculate Ka from pH and molarity
Calculating Ka from pH and molarity is one of the most practical equilibrium skills in general chemistry. If you know the measured pH of a weak acid solution and the initial concentration of that acid, you can determine how strongly the acid dissociates in water. The acid dissociation constant, Ka, is the equilibrium constant for the reaction of an acid donating a proton to water. For a monoprotic weak acid written as HA, the equilibrium is:
HA ⇌ H+ + A–
The value of Ka tells you how far this reaction proceeds. A larger Ka means the acid dissociates more extensively and is therefore stronger. A smaller Ka means only a small fraction of the acid ionizes, which is characteristic of a weaker acid. Because pH directly gives information about the hydrogen ion concentration, and molarity gives the starting amount of acid available, these two inputs are enough to determine Ka for a simple monoprotic weak acid system.
The key formula
For a monoprotic weak acid with initial concentration C, let x represent the amount that dissociates. At equilibrium:
- [H+] = x
- [A–] = x
- [HA] = C – x
Since pH = -log[H+], you first compute hydrogen ion concentration:
x = [H+] = 10-pH
Then substitute into the equilibrium expression:
Ka = [H+][A–] / [HA] = x2 / (C – x)
This calculator uses that exact expression, rather than relying only on the weak acid approximation. That matters because the common shortcut, Ka ≈ x2/C, becomes less accurate when ionization is not negligible compared with the initial concentration.
Step by step example
Suppose you prepare a 0.100 M solution of a monoprotic weak acid and measure its pH as 2.87.
- Convert pH to hydrogen ion concentration: [H+] = 10-2.87 = 1.35 × 10-3 M
- Set x = 1.35 × 10-3 M
- Compute equilibrium concentration of undissociated acid: [HA] = 0.100 – 0.00135 = 0.09865 M
- Calculate Ka: Ka = (1.35 × 10-3)2 / 0.09865
- Ka ≈ 1.85 × 10-5
That result falls in the typical range of weak acids such as acetic acid. Once Ka is known, you can also find pKa using:
pKa = -log(Ka)
Why pH and molarity are enough for weak acid Ka calculations
In a dilute aqueous solution of a monoprotic weak acid, the pH tells you the equilibrium concentration of hydrogen ions generated by acid dissociation. Because each acid molecule that dissociates produces one H+ and one conjugate base A–, the concentration of A– is the same as the dissociated amount x. The initial molarity provides the starting concentration C, so equilibrium concentration of HA becomes C – x. With those three terms, the Ka expression is fully determined.
This method works best under standard instructional assumptions: the solution contains a single weak monoprotic acid, water autoionization is negligible compared with the acid contribution, and no additional strong acid or strong base is present. If your system contains buffers, polyprotic acids, mixed equilibria, or activity effects at higher ionic strength, a more advanced treatment is needed.
Interpretation of Ka values
Ka values can span many orders of magnitude, which is why chemists often use pKa to compare acids more easily. Stronger acids have larger Ka and smaller pKa. Weaker acids have smaller Ka and larger pKa. For laboratory and classroom work, recognizing the order of magnitude is often more useful than memorizing the exact number.
| Acid | Approximate Ka at 25 C | Approximate pKa | Strength comparison |
|---|---|---|---|
| Formic acid | 1.8 × 10-4 | 3.75 | Stronger weak acid than acetic acid |
| Acetic acid | 1.8 × 10-5 | 4.76 | Common benchmark weak acid |
| Hydrofluoric acid | 6.8 × 10-4 | 3.17 | Weak acid, but stronger than many organic acids |
| Hypochlorous acid | 3.0 × 10-8 | 7.52 | Considerably weaker acid |
| Hydrocyanic acid | 4.9 × 10-10 | 9.31 | Very weak acid |
The values above are representative 25 C reference values commonly used in chemistry education. Small differences may appear between data sources due to rounding, temperature, and reference conventions. Still, they are excellent anchors for checking whether a calculated Ka is reasonable.
Common mistakes when calculating Ka from pH and concentration
1. Using pH directly as [H+]
This is one of the most common errors. pH is a logarithmic quantity, not the concentration itself. You must convert it first:
[H+] = 10-pH
2. Forgetting to subtract x from the initial concentration
The undissociated acid remaining at equilibrium is not the original concentration C. It is C – x. If x is tiny compared with C, you may approximate [HA] ≈ C, but for accuracy the exact formula is better.
3. Applying the method to strong acids
This calculator is designed for weak monoprotic acids. Strong acids such as HCl, HBr, and HNO3 dissociate essentially completely in water, so Ka is extremely large and not usefully back-calculated with this simple weak-acid framework.
4. Ignoring percent ionization
Percent ionization is a helpful diagnostic:
% ionization = ([H+] / C) × 100
If percent ionization is very small, the weak acid approximation is usually acceptable. If it is larger, the exact expression should definitely be used. This calculator reports percent ionization so you can judge whether an approximation would have been appropriate.
Exact calculation versus approximation
In many introductory problems, students are taught to use the simplified expression Ka ≈ x2/C when x is much smaller than C. This is convenient, but there is educational value in seeing how close the approximation is to the exact answer. The table below shows how approximation error can grow as ionization becomes a larger fraction of the starting concentration.
| Percent ionization | Approximation quality | Typical interpretation | Recommended method |
|---|---|---|---|
| Below 1% | Excellent | x is tiny compared with C | Approximation or exact method |
| 1% to 5% | Usually acceptable in basic coursework | Borderline region | Prefer exact method for precision |
| Above 5% | Approximation becomes weak | x is not negligible | Use exact method |
| Above 10% | Poor approximation | Significant dissociation relative to C | Exact method strongly recommended |
What the chart means
The chart produced by the calculator compares the initial acid concentration and the equilibrium concentrations of H+, A–, and HA. This is useful because Ka values are often extremely small, making them less intuitive at first glance. By looking at the bar chart, you can immediately see how much acid remained undissociated and how much was converted into ions. For most weak acids, the HA bar is much larger than the H+ and A– bars, which visually reinforces why these acids are called weak.
Real laboratory context
In laboratory work, pH is often measured with a pH probe or meter rather than inferred theoretically. That makes Ka determination from pH and molarity a practical method for characterizing an unknown weak acid solution or validating an expected acid constant. However, real measurements carry uncertainty. The pH meter must be calibrated, temperature should be recorded, and concentration preparation should be accurate. Since pH is logarithmic, even a small pH measurement error can produce a noticeable change in [H+] and therefore in Ka.
For example, a shift of only 0.01 pH units changes hydrogen ion concentration by about 2.3%. Because Ka depends on x squared in the numerator, the final Ka can be affected substantially. This is why careful technique matters in any serious analytical setting.
When this method is not enough
There are several situations where direct Ka calculation from pH and initial molarity becomes more complicated:
- Polyprotic acids: acids such as carbonic acid or phosphoric acid dissociate in multiple steps and have multiple Ka values.
- Buffers: if conjugate base is already present, the measured pH reflects more than just simple dissociation of HA.
- High ionic strength: concentrations no longer perfectly match activities, so a rigorous treatment may require activity coefficients.
- Very dilute solutions: water autoionization can become significant.
- Mixed acid systems: the pH may result from more than one proton source.
For standard educational problems involving a single weak monoprotic acid in water, though, the method used here is exactly the right starting point.
Useful authoritative chemistry references
If you want to verify equilibrium concepts, pH relationships, or acid-base terminology from trusted educational and government sources, these references are especially helpful:
- Chemistry LibreTexts educational reference
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency chemistry and water resources
- NIST Chemistry WebBook
Practical summary
To calculate Ka from pH and molarity, convert pH into hydrogen ion concentration, treat that concentration as the dissociated amount x, compute the remaining undissociated acid as C – x, and then evaluate Ka = x2/(C – x). This gives an exact equilibrium-based result for a monoprotic weak acid. Once you have Ka, you can compare acid strengths, calculate pKa, assess percent ionization, and better understand the chemistry of the solution.
That is why this type of calculation appears so often in chemistry homework, lab reports, and exam questions: it connects measurable quantities such as pH with the deeper equilibrium behavior of weak acids. Use the calculator above to speed up the arithmetic while still seeing every meaningful quantity that comes out of the equilibrium model.