Calculate pH of 0.1 HCN Solution
Use this premium weak-acid calculator to estimate the pH of a 0.1 M hydrogen cyanide solution using the acid dissociation constant, exact quadratic equilibrium, and percent ionization.
HCN pH Calculator
Equilibrium Visualization
This chart compares the starting HCN concentration with the equilibrium concentrations of H+, CN–, and undissociated HCN.
How to calculate the pH of a 0.1 HCN solution
To calculate the pH of a 0.1 M hydrogen cyanide solution, you need to treat HCN as a weak acid rather than a strong acid. That distinction matters because weak acids do not fully dissociate in water. Instead, they establish an equilibrium:
The equilibrium is described by the acid dissociation constant, Ka:
For hydrogen cyanide at 25 degrees C, a commonly used value is Ka ≈ 6.2 × 10-10. Because this value is extremely small, HCN is a very weak acid. That means a 0.1 M solution produces only a small concentration of hydrogen ions, and the pH ends up a little above 5 rather than near 1.
Step-by-step setup
Suppose the initial concentration of HCN is 0.1 M. Let x represent the amount of HCN that dissociates.
- Initial [HCN] = 0.1
- Initial [H+] = 0
- Initial [CN–] = 0
- Change: HCN decreases by x, H+ increases by x, CN– increases by x
- Equilibrium: [HCN] = 0.1 – x, [H+] = x, [CN–] = x
Substitute into the equilibrium expression:
Because Ka is so small, x is tiny compared with 0.1. In many classroom settings, you can approximate 0.1 – x as 0.1:
Now convert hydrogen ion concentration to pH:
If you solve the exact quadratic equation instead of using the approximation, the answer is essentially the same because the dissociation is so small. The exact pH for a 0.1 M HCN solution using Ka = 6.2 × 10-10 is approximately 5.10.
Why HCN behaves differently from strong acids
Students often assume that a 0.1 M acid should always have a very low pH, but that is true only for strong acids such as HCl or HNO3. Strong acids ionize nearly completely in water, so a 0.1 M strong acid has [H+] close to 0.1 M and a pH close to 1. Weak acids such as HCN ionize only partially, so the hydrogen ion concentration remains much lower.
This difference can be understood by comparing acid strength constants. HCN has a pKa near 9.21, which means it resists ionization. In contrast, strong acids have very large Ka values and very negative pKa values. As a result, equal molar concentrations do not produce equal pH values.
| Acid | Typical strength indicator | 0.1 M hydrogen ion behavior | Approximate pH |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hydrochloric acid, HCl | Strong acid, essentially complete dissociation | [H+] ≈ 0.1 M | 1.00 |
| Hydrogen cyanide, HCN | Ka ≈ 6.2 × 10-10, pKa ≈ 9.21 | [H+] ≈ 7.9 × 10-6 M | 5.10 |
| Acetic acid, CH3COOH | Ka ≈ 1.8 × 10-5, pKa ≈ 4.76 | [H+] ≈ 1.34 × 10-3 M at 0.1 M | 2.87 |
The table shows that HCN is dramatically weaker than acetic acid and vastly weaker than HCl. That is why its pH is much higher than many learners first expect.
Exact quadratic solution vs weak-acid approximation
For weak acids, the shortcut formula x ≈ √(KaC) is widely used because it is fast and usually accurate when dissociation is small. However, a senior chemistry or engineering workflow often prefers the exact equilibrium solution, especially when concentrations are low or the weak acid is not extremely weak.
Exact expression
Starting from:
Rearrange into a quadratic:
Then solve for x using the physically meaningful positive root:
For C = 0.1 M and Ka = 6.2 × 10-10, this gives x very close to 7.87 × 10-6 M. Because the equilibrium hydrogen ion concentration equals x, the pH remains approximately 5.10.
When the approximation is safe
- Ka is very small.
- The acid concentration is not extremely dilute.
- The percent ionization is low, usually below about 5 percent.
For 0.1 M HCN, the percent ionization is tiny:
That value is far below 5 percent, so the shortcut is fully justified here.
Key equilibrium numbers for 0.1 M HCN
Below is a practical summary of the most useful values for a standard 0.1 M HCN solution at 25 degrees C.
| Quantity | Value | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| Initial HCN concentration | 0.100 M | Starting analytical concentration |
| Ka of HCN | 6.2 × 10-10 | Very weak acid dissociation constant |
| Equilibrium [H+] | 7.87 × 10-6 M | Determines pH directly |
| Equilibrium [CN–] | 7.87 × 10-6 M | Equal to [H+] from dissociation stoichiometry |
| Equilibrium [HCN] | 0.099992 M | Nearly all acid remains undissociated |
| pH | 5.10 | Mildly acidic solution |
| Percent ionization | 0.0079% | Shows extremely limited dissociation |
Common mistakes when solving HCN pH problems
1. Treating HCN as a strong acid
This is the biggest mistake. If you incorrectly assume complete dissociation, you would estimate pH = 1 for a 0.1 M solution, which is drastically wrong.
2. Forgetting to use the Ka expression properly
Because HCN is monoprotic, the equilibrium setup is straightforward, but the denominator must remain the undissociated acid concentration, 0.1 – x, not simply 0.1 unless you explicitly invoke the approximation.
3. Using pKa incorrectly
If pKa is given instead of Ka, convert it using:
For pKa = 9.21, Ka ≈ 6.17 × 10-10, which is consistent with the value used in most general chemistry calculations.
4. Ignoring water autoionization context
For moderately concentrated weak acid problems like 0.1 M HCN, the acid-generated hydrogen ions dominate over pure water contributions. But in extremely dilute acid solutions, water autoionization can become important and the simple weak-acid treatment may need refinement.
Why percent ionization matters
Percent ionization is a valuable way to assess whether your assumptions are reasonable. In the HCN case, the fraction that dissociates is tiny. That tells you two things immediately: first, the approximation 0.1 – x ≈ 0.1 is valid; second, the molecular acid form strongly dominates over cyanide ions in equilibrium.
This concept also helps compare weak acids. Acids with larger Ka values show greater percent ionization at the same concentration. HCN, with Ka in the 10-10 range, ionizes much less than acids such as formic acid or acetic acid.
Real-world context for hydrogen cyanide chemistry
Hydrogen cyanide is widely discussed in environmental chemistry, industrial safety, and toxicology. Even though the pH calculation is an equilibrium problem, understanding HCN in practice requires awareness that cyanide chemistry is highly safety-sensitive. HCN is a volatile and extremely toxic substance. In laboratory and industrial settings, pH strongly influences the balance between molecular HCN and cyanide ion, which affects vapor release and exposure risk.
At lower pH, more cyanide exists in the protonated molecular form, HCN. At higher pH, cyanide is driven toward CN–. This acid-base behavior is a major reason chemists and environmental engineers monitor cyanide systems carefully. If you are studying this topic beyond classroom calculations, review guidance from authoritative scientific and public health sources.
Shortcut workflow for exams and homework
- Write the dissociation reaction: HCN ⇌ H+ + CN–.
- Set up an ICE table with initial concentration 0.1 M.
- Use Ka = x2 / (0.1 – x).
- If allowed, apply x ≈ √(Ka × 0.1).
- Compute x as the hydrogen ion concentration.
- Find pH using pH = -log x.
- Check that percent ionization is small to validate the approximation.
Interpretation of the final pH
A pH of about 5.10 means the solution is acidic, but not aggressively acidic in the way a strong mineral acid would be at the same molarity. Numerically, the hydrogen ion concentration is around 7.9 × 10-6 M, which is far above neutral water but far below 0.1 M. That is the signature behavior of a weak acid with very low Ka.
From a problem-solving perspective, this result reinforces a central chemistry lesson: concentration alone does not determine pH. Acid strength matters just as much. Two solutions can have the same analytical concentration while exhibiting pH values that differ by several full units.
Final takeaway
If you need to calculate the pH of 0.1 HCN solution, use weak-acid equilibrium rather than complete dissociation. With Ka ≈ 6.2 × 10-10, the hydrogen ion concentration is approximately 7.87 × 10-6 M, giving a pH of about 5.10. The exact quadratic method and the weak-acid approximation both lead to virtually the same answer because only about 0.0079 percent of the HCN ionizes.