Calculate the pH and pOH of 0.0146 M HNO3
Use this interactive nitric acid calculator to compute hydronium concentration, pH, pOH, and hydroxide concentration for a strong acid solution. The example is preset to 0.0146 M HNO3, which dissociates essentially completely in water at 25 degrees Celsius.
Results
Click the calculate button to view the pH, pOH, hydronium concentration, hydroxide concentration, and a chart comparing the species present in solution.
How to calculate the pH and pOH of 0.0146 M HNO3
To calculate the pH and pOH of 0.0146 M HNO3, you start by recognizing that nitric acid is a strong acid. In introductory and most general chemistry contexts, strong acids are treated as completely dissociated in water. That means every mole of HNO3 contributes approximately one mole of hydrogen ion equivalent, more precisely represented in aqueous solution as hydronium, H3O+. Because nitric acid is monoprotic, the molar concentration of hydronium is taken to be equal to the molarity of the acid itself. For this example, the hydronium concentration is 0.0146 M.
The pH formula is straightforward: pH = -log10[H3O+]. When you substitute 0.0146 for the hydronium concentration, the calculation becomes pH = -log10(0.0146). Evaluating that expression gives a pH of approximately 1.8356. Once pH is known, pOH is found from the relationship pH + pOH = 14.00 at 25 degrees Celsius. Therefore, pOH = 14.00 – 1.8356 = 12.1644. These values tell you the solution is strongly acidic, as expected for nitric acid.
Final answer for 0.0146 M HNO3 at 25 degrees Celsius: pH ≈ 1.8356 and pOH ≈ 12.1644. Because HNO3 is a strong monoprotic acid, [H3O+] ≈ 0.0146 M and [OH-] ≈ 6.85 x 10^-13 M.
Step-by-step method
- Identify the acid as strong and monoprotic. HNO3 donates one proton per formula unit.
- Assume complete dissociation: HNO3 → H+ + NO3-.
- Set hydronium concentration equal to the acid concentration: [H3O+] = 0.0146 M.
- Use the pH equation: pH = -log10(0.0146) = 1.8356.
- Use the relationship pOH = 14.00 – pH at 25 degrees Celsius.
- Compute pOH: 14.00 – 1.8356 = 12.1644.
Why HNO3 is treated differently from weak acids
A major source of confusion in acid-base problems is whether you need an ICE table. For nitric acid, you usually do not. HNO3 is one of the common strong acids taught in chemistry courses, alongside HCl, HBr, HI, HClO4, and the first proton of H2SO4. In practice, that means the dissociation is so extensive that the equilibrium lies overwhelmingly to the product side. As a result, the hydronium concentration is controlled directly by the formal acid concentration.
If the acid in the problem were weak, such as acetic acid or hydrofluoric acid, then the concentration of hydronium would not equal the starting acid molarity. In those cases, you would need the acid dissociation constant, Ka, and typically solve an equilibrium expression. Since the present problem uses nitric acid, the computation is much faster and cleaner.
Important formulas for this calculation
- Strong acid assumption: [H3O+] ≈ acid molarity for a monoprotic strong acid
- pH formula: pH = -log10[H3O+]
- pOH formula: pOH = -log10[OH-]
- Water relationship at 25 degrees Celsius: pH + pOH = 14.00
- Ion product of water: Kw = [H3O+][OH-] = 1.0 x 10^-14
Using Kw also lets you find hydroxide concentration. Since [H3O+] = 0.0146 M, then [OH-] = 1.0 x 10^-14 / 0.0146 ≈ 6.85 x 10^-13 M. This tiny hydroxide concentration is exactly what you expect in a strongly acidic solution. It also provides a useful consistency check because a very low pH should correspond to a very low hydroxide concentration.
Numerical breakdown for 0.0146 M HNO3
| Quantity | Value | How it is obtained |
|---|---|---|
| Acid concentration | 0.0146 M | Given in the problem |
| Hydronium concentration, [H3O+] | 0.0146 M | Equal to HNO3 concentration for a strong monoprotic acid |
| pH | 1.8356 | -log10(0.0146) |
| pOH | 12.1644 | 14.0000 – 1.8356 |
| Hydroxide concentration, [OH-] | 6.85 x 10^-13 M | 1.0 x 10^-14 / 0.0146 |
How strong acid concentration affects pH
The pH scale is logarithmic, not linear. That means a small visible change in pH corresponds to a large multiplicative change in hydrogen ion concentration. Each 1 unit decrease in pH means the hydronium concentration is 10 times larger. This is why a solution with pH 1.8 is not just slightly more acidic than a solution with pH 2.8. It is about 10 times more acidic in terms of hydronium concentration.
For students, this has two major implications. First, always keep track of powers of ten. Second, remember that pH values below 2 represent highly acidic conditions. A nitric acid solution of 0.0146 M sits clearly in that category. It is much more acidic than mildly acidic water or soft drinks and far more acidic than neutral water.
| Strong acid concentration (M) | [H3O+] (M) | pH at 25 degrees Celsius | Relative acidity vs pH 3.00 solution |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.0 x 10^-3 | 1.0 x 10^-3 | 3.0000 | 1x |
| 5.0 x 10^-3 | 5.0 x 10^-3 | 2.3010 | 5x |
| 1.46 x 10^-2 | 1.46 x 10^-2 | 1.8356 | 14.6x |
| 1.0 x 10^-1 | 1.0 x 10^-1 | 1.0000 | 100x |
Common mistakes when solving this exact problem
- Using an ICE table unnecessarily: For HNO3, complete dissociation is the standard assumption in most chemistry coursework.
- Forgetting the negative sign in the pH formula: Since log10 of a number less than 1 is negative, pH becomes positive only after applying the minus sign.
- Mixing up pH and pOH: pH describes hydronium concentration, while pOH describes hydroxide concentration.
- Rounding too early: If you round pH too soon, the pOH value may be slightly off. Keep extra digits until the final step.
- Confusing M with mM: A value of 0.0146 M is 14.6 mM. Unit conversion errors can shift the answer by a full pH unit or more.
Interpretation of the answer
A pH of about 1.84 means the solution is strongly acidic. In practical terms, such a solution has a high concentration of hydronium ions compared with everyday substances. For example, pure water at 25 degrees Celsius has a neutral pH of 7.00. A solution at pH 1.84 has hydronium concentration of 10^(7.00 – 1.84), or roughly 1.45 x 10^5 times higher than neutral water. This illustrates how dramatic the pH scale can be.
The pOH of 12.16 is correspondingly high because acidic solutions contain very little hydroxide. Since the sum of pH and pOH is 14.00 at 25 degrees Celsius, a low pH automatically implies a high pOH. These paired values are two ways of describing the same acid-base state of the solution.
Reaction and species present in solution
The dissociation of nitric acid in water can be represented as:
HNO3 + H2O → H3O+ + NO3-
This equation shows that nitric acid transfers a proton to water, creating hydronium and nitrate ions. In the resulting solution, the main dissolved species are water, hydronium ions, and nitrate ions. The hydroxide concentration is extremely small because the elevated hydronium concentration suppresses hydroxide through the water equilibrium.
How this problem appears in exams and homework
Problems like “calculate the pH and pOH of 0.0146 M HNO3” are often designed to test whether you can quickly identify a strong acid and apply logarithms correctly. In many cases, the arithmetic is not the main challenge. The real skill is choosing the right model. If you recognize HNO3 as a strong monoprotic acid, then the path is direct. If you misclassify it as a weak acid, you add unnecessary complexity and may get the wrong answer.
Teachers also use this type of problem to reinforce significant figures. Because the concentration 0.0146 M has three significant figures, many instructors would report the pH to three digits after the decimal, giving pH = 1.836. If more internal precision is retained, the pOH is 12.164. Always follow your course rounding rules, but keep intermediate values unrounded whenever possible.
Reference points on the pH scale
| Material or condition | Typical pH | Comparison to 0.0146 M HNO3 |
|---|---|---|
| Pure water at 25 degrees Celsius | 7.00 | Far less acidic |
| Rainwater, typical natural range | 5.0 to 5.6 | Still much less acidic |
| Black coffee | 4.8 to 5.1 | Much less acidic |
| Lemon juice | 2.0 to 2.6 | Comparable order of magnitude, but usually less acidic than this HNO3 solution |
| 0.0146 M HNO3 | 1.8356 | Strongly acidic |
Authoritative chemistry references
If you want to verify definitions, pH scale fundamentals, or information about nitric acid, these sources are useful and authoritative:
- USGS: pH and Water
- NIH PubChem: Nitric Acid
- Michigan State University: Acids, Bases, and pH Concepts
Bottom line
To calculate the pH and pOH of 0.0146 M HNO3, assume complete dissociation because nitric acid is a strong monoprotic acid. Set [H3O+] equal to 0.0146 M, calculate pH using the negative logarithm, and then determine pOH from 14.00 minus pH. The final values are pH ≈ 1.8356 and pOH ≈ 12.1644 at 25 degrees Celsius. Once you understand that logic, similar strong acid problems become very fast to solve.