Calculate pH of Ca(OH)2 Given Ksp
Use this premium equilibrium calculator to convert a calcium hydroxide solubility product constant into molar solubility, hydroxide concentration, pOH, and pH. It also supports common-ion cases with initial Ca2+ or OH– already present.
Equilibrium Inputs
- Pure water model uses Ksp = [Ca2+][OH–]2 = s(2s)2 = 4s3.
- If a common ion exists, the calculator solves the exact equilibrium numerically.
- pH is computed from pH = pKw – pOH using the selected temperature.
Calculated Results
Expert Guide: How to Calculate the pH of Ca(OH)2 from Ksp
Calcium hydroxide, often called slaked lime, is a classic example in solubility equilibrium and acid-base chemistry. Students, lab technicians, and water-treatment professionals often need to connect the solubility product constant Ksp with the pH of a saturated Ca(OH)2 solution. This page explains the chemistry in a practical, step-by-step way, and the calculator above handles both the simple pure-water case and more advanced common-ion situations.
What Ksp means for calcium hydroxide
When solid calcium hydroxide dissolves in water, it separates according to this equilibrium:
Ca(OH)2(s) ⇌ Ca2+(aq) + 2OH–(aq)
The solubility product constant is written as:
Ksp = [Ca2+][OH–]2
The solid does not appear in the expression because its activity is treated as constant. If the solution is saturated and no other source of calcium or hydroxide is present, you can define the molar solubility as s. That means:
- [Ca2+] = s
- [OH–] = 2s
Substituting those values into the Ksp expression gives:
Ksp = s(2s)2 = 4s3
So the molar solubility is:
s = (Ksp/4)1/3
Once you know s, finding the hydroxide concentration is easy:
[OH–] = 2s
Then calculate:
- pOH = -log[OH–]
- pH = pKw – pOH
At 25 C, pKw is approximately 14.00, so many classroom examples use pH = 14.00 – pOH.
Step-by-step example using a typical Ksp value
Suppose you are given Ksp = 5.5 × 10-6 for Ca(OH)2 at 25 C. The sequence is:
- Start with the equilibrium expression: Ksp = [Ca2+][OH–]2.
- Let the molar solubility be s.
- Write concentrations in terms of s: [Ca2+] = s and [OH–] = 2s.
- Substitute: 5.5 × 10-6 = 4s3.
- Solve: s = (5.5 × 10-6 / 4)1/3.
- This gives s ≈ 0.0111 M.
- Therefore [OH–] ≈ 0.0222 M.
- Now compute pOH: pOH = -log(0.0222) ≈ 1.65.
- Finally, pH = 14.00 – 1.65 ≈ 12.35.
This is why saturated calcium hydroxide solution is strongly basic. Even though Ca(OH)2 is only sparingly soluble, every formula unit that dissolves releases two hydroxide ions, and those OH– ions push the pH high.
Why the common-ion effect matters
The simple equation Ksp = 4s3 only applies cleanly when no calcium or hydroxide ions are already present before dissolution begins. In real systems, that assumption can break down. For example, if you dissolve Ca(OH)2 in a solution that already contains NaOH, the initial OH– concentration suppresses further dissolution. The same happens if a calcium salt such as CaCl2 is present.
That phenomenon is the common-ion effect. Le Chatelier’s principle predicts it qualitatively, and the equilibrium expression predicts it quantitatively. If the initial hydroxide concentration is COH, the exact equilibrium equation becomes:
Ksp = s(COH + 2s)2
If the initial calcium concentration is CCa, the equation becomes:
Ksp = (CCa + s)(2s)2
Those are no longer simple one-step cube roots, which is why the calculator above solves them numerically. That approach gives a more accurate answer than forcing a rough approximation.
Temperature and pH conversion
Many students memorize pH + pOH = 14, but that relation is strictly true only at 25 C because it depends on the ion product of water, Kw. As temperature changes, Kw also changes. That means the pH corresponding to a given hydroxide concentration shifts slightly with temperature. The effect is not huge for basic classroom examples, but it matters if you want cleaner calculations.
| Temperature | Kw | pKw | Meaning for pH calculations |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20 C | 6.81 × 10-15 | 14.17 | Neutral pH is slightly above 7, so a fixed [OH–] gives a slightly higher pH than at 25 C. |
| 25 C | 1.00 × 10-14 | 14.00 | This is the standard textbook reference point used in most general chemistry problems. |
| 30 C | 1.47 × 10-14 | 13.83 | Neutral pH is slightly below 7, so the same [OH–] corresponds to a slightly lower pH than at 25 C. |
That is why this calculator includes a temperature dropdown. It still focuses on Ca(OH)2 equilibrium, but it uses the selected pKw when converting pOH to pH.
How to avoid common mistakes
- Do not forget the coefficient 2 on hydroxide. Ca(OH)2 releases two OH– ions per formula unit.
- Do not set [OH–] equal to s. The correct relation is [OH–] = 2s in pure water.
- Do not assume pH + pOH always equals 14.00. That shortcut is temperature-specific.
- Do not ignore common ions when present. Initial OH– or Ca2+ changes the equilibrium substantially.
- Be careful with exponents. Scientific notation errors are one of the biggest reasons equilibrium calculations fail.
Real-world context: how basic is saturated calcium hydroxide?
One useful way to interpret your result is to compare it with familiar water-quality benchmarks. A saturated Ca(OH)2 solution has a pH far above typical drinking-water or pool-water recommendations. That is exactly why lime is handled carefully in laboratories, construction, and water treatment systems.
| Water context | Typical pH value or range | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| Pure water at 25 C | 7.0 | Neutral reference point under standard conditions. |
| EPA secondary drinking water guidance | 6.5 to 8.5 | Common aesthetic target range for potable water systems. |
| CDC pool-water operating guidance | 7.2 to 7.8 | Range commonly maintained for swimmer comfort and sanitizer efficiency. |
| Saturated Ca(OH)2 from Ksp near 5.5 × 10-6 | About 12.35 at 25 C | Strongly basic, much higher than ordinary water-management targets. |
From this comparison, you can immediately see why calcium hydroxide is useful for neutralizing acidity and adjusting alkalinity. A relatively small dissolved amount can deliver a very alkaline solution.
When approximations are acceptable
In introductory chemistry, you may be taught to approximate common-ion problems by assuming the added common-ion concentration is much larger than the amount that dissolves. For example, if the initial hydroxide concentration is 0.10 M, the extra 2s from calcium hydroxide may be tiny relative to 0.10 M. Then you can simplify:
Ksp ≈ s(COH)2
That lets you estimate the molar solubility rapidly. However, if the common-ion concentration is only modestly larger than s, the approximation can drift. The calculator on this page avoids that issue by solving the exact equation numerically rather than assuming the extra concentration is negligible.
Best practice workflow for students and lab users
- Write the balanced dissolution equation first.
- Build the correct Ksp expression using stoichiometric coefficients.
- Define molar solubility with a variable such as s.
- Express all equilibrium concentrations in terms of s.
- Solve for s using the appropriate pure-water or common-ion equation.
- Convert to [OH–].
- Calculate pOH, then pH using the correct pKw.
- Check whether your final pH is chemically reasonable for a basic hydroxide.
If your final pH comes out near neutral, that is usually a sign that one of the stoichiometric factors was missed or that scientific notation was entered incorrectly.
Authoritative references for pH and equilibrium context
For readers who want deeper background on pH, water chemistry, and equilibrium concepts, these sources are useful and authoritative:
- USGS: pH and Water
- Purdue University: Solubility Products
- Florida State University: Acid-Base Chemistry Review
Those resources help connect the practical calculator result with the broader theory of solubility equilibria, the pH scale, and the chemistry of aqueous ions.
Final takeaway
To calculate the pH of Ca(OH)2 given Ksp, the key idea is that calcium hydroxide produces one Ca2+ and two OH– ions. In pure water, that gives the compact relationship Ksp = 4s3. From there, you solve for molar solubility, double it to get hydroxide concentration, and convert that value into pOH and then pH. For common-ion problems, use the exact equilibrium expressions instead of relying blindly on shortcuts. If you keep the stoichiometry straight, this is one of the most elegant and useful links between solubility and acid-base chemistry.
Note: Reported Ksp values for Ca(OH)2 can vary slightly by source, ionic strength, and instructional convention. Small differences in Ksp create small shifts in the final pH.