Calculate the pH of 0.250 M HC2H3O2 Solution
Use this premium weak-acid calculator to find pH, hydrogen ion concentration, acetate concentration, remaining acetic acid, percent ionization, and the weak-acid approximation check for a 0.250 M HC2H3O2 solution.
Expert Guide: How to Calculate the pH of a 0.250 M HC2H3O2 Solution
To calculate the pH of a 0.250 M HC2H3O2 solution, you need to recognize that HC2H3O2 is acetic acid, a weak acid. That matters because weak acids do not fully dissociate in water. Instead, they establish an equilibrium:
Because the acid is weak, the concentration of hydrogen ions, H+, is not equal to the initial acid concentration. You cannot simply set [H+] = 0.250 M. Instead, you use the acid dissociation constant, Ka. For acetic acid at 25 degrees Celsius, a commonly used value is:
The pH is then found from the equilibrium concentration of H+, using:
Step 1: Write the equilibrium expression
For acetic acid dissociation, the equilibrium expression is:
Start with an initial concentration of 0.250 M acetic acid. Before dissociation:
- [HC2H3O2] = 0.250 M
- [H+] = 0
- [C2H3O2-] = 0
If x mol/L of acetic acid dissociates, then at equilibrium:
- [HC2H3O2] = 0.250 – x
- [H+] = x
- [C2H3O2-] = x
Substitute into the Ka expression:
Step 2: Solve for x
There are two common ways to solve this problem. In many introductory chemistry settings, students use the weak-acid approximation, which assumes x is small compared with 0.250. In that case:
So:
This gives an approximate hydrogen ion concentration:
Now calculate pH:
The exact quadratic solution gives virtually the same result:
Using C = 0.250 M and Ka = 1.8 × 10^-5:
- Exact [H+] ≈ 0.002112 M
- Exact pH ≈ 2.675
Why acetic acid does not behave like a strong acid
Strong acids such as HCl ionize essentially completely in water, so a 0.250 M HCl solution would have [H+] close to 0.250 M and a pH near 0.60. Acetic acid behaves very differently because its Ka is small. Only a tiny fraction of the acid molecules release a proton. This is why a 0.250 M acetic acid solution is much less acidic than a 0.250 M strong acid solution.
The percent ionization helps quantify this:
For this solution:
- [H+] ≈ 0.002112 M
- Initial concentration = 0.250 M
- Percent ionization ≈ 0.845%
That means more than 99% of the acetic acid remains as undissociated HC2H3O2 at equilibrium. This small ionization fraction is exactly what you expect for a weak acid at moderate concentration.
When the weak-acid approximation is valid
A widely used rule is the 5% rule. If x divided by the initial concentration is less than 5%, then replacing 0.250 – x with 0.250 introduces only a small error. In this problem:
Since 0.845% is well below 5%, the approximation is valid. That is why the approximate and exact pH values are almost identical. In lab courses, analytical chemistry, and software tools, the exact quadratic method is usually preferred because it avoids any assumption. In manual homework calculations, the approximation is often acceptable when the percent ionization is small.
Comparison table: acetic acid concentration vs pH
The data below use Ka = 1.8 × 10^-5 and the exact quadratic expression. These values show how concentration changes the pH of acetic acid solutions.
| Initial HC2H3O2 concentration (M) | Exact [H+] (M) | Exact pH | Percent ionization |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.500 | 2.991 × 10^-3 | 2.524 | 0.598% |
| 0.250 | 2.112 × 10^-3 | 2.675 | 0.845% |
| 0.100 | 1.333 × 10^-3 | 2.875 | 1.333% |
| 0.0100 | 4.153 × 10^-4 | 3.382 | 4.153% |
The pattern is important. As the solution becomes more dilute, the pH rises, but the percent ionization increases. This is a hallmark of weak-acid behavior. Lower concentration pushes the equilibrium so a larger fraction of the acid dissociates.
Comparison table: exact vs approximation for 0.250 M acetic acid
The next table shows why students often use the square-root shortcut for this specific problem.
| Method | Calculated [H+] (M) | Calculated pH | Absolute pH difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Exact quadratic | 2.112 × 10^-3 | 2.675 | 0.000 |
| Weak-acid approximation | 2.121 × 10^-3 | 2.673 | 0.002 |
The pH difference is only about 0.002 pH units, which is negligible for many classroom problems. However, if you work with dilute solutions, larger Ka values, or precision-sensitive calculations, the exact equation is the safer choice.
Full worked solution using an ICE approach
Many chemistry instructors teach equilibrium with an ICE table, where ICE stands for Initial, Change, and Equilibrium. Here is the setup for 0.250 M acetic acid:
- Initial: [HC2H3O2] = 0.250, [H+] = 0, [C2H3O2-] = 0
- Change: [HC2H3O2] decreases by x, [H+] increases by x, [C2H3O2-] increases by x
- Equilibrium: [HC2H3O2] = 0.250 – x, [H+] = x, [C2H3O2-] = x
Substituting into Ka gives:
Multiply both sides by the denominator:
Apply the quadratic formula. The physically meaningful root is positive:
This yields x ≈ 2.112 × 10^-3 M. Therefore:
- [H+] = 2.112 × 10^-3 M
- [C2H3O2-] = 2.112 × 10^-3 M
- [HC2H3O2]remaining = 0.250 – 0.002112 = 0.247888 M
- pH = 2.675
Common mistakes students make
- Treating acetic acid like a strong acid. If you set [H+] = 0.250 M, the pH would be 0.60, which is far too low.
- Using pKa incorrectly. If you are given pKa instead of Ka, remember Ka = 10^(-pKa).
- Forgetting the equilibrium denominator. Ka always depends on the ratio of products to reactants at equilibrium.
- Dropping x without checking. The 5% rule should support the approximation.
- Rounding too early. Keep extra digits until the final pH is reported.
How temperature and Ka affect the answer
The exact pH depends on the Ka value used, and Ka itself depends on temperature. Many textbook problems assume 25 degrees Celsius and use Ka = 1.8 × 10^-5 for acetic acid. If your course, lab manual, or exam provides a different Ka, use that value. A larger Ka means stronger acid behavior, greater dissociation, higher [H+], and therefore lower pH. A smaller Ka means less dissociation and a higher pH.
What the chart in this calculator shows
The chart displays the equilibrium concentrations of the major species after you click Calculate. For a 0.250 M acetic acid solution, the bars reveal a useful visual truth: the undissociated acid concentration remains close to the initial concentration, while H+ and acetate are both present at much smaller concentrations. That graphic helps connect the math to the chemistry. Weak acids establish equilibrium, but they do not dissociate very much.
Practical relevance of acetic acid pH calculations
Although this is a classic classroom exercise, the underlying principles matter in real work. Food science, environmental chemistry, biochemistry, and analytical chemistry all rely on equilibrium calculations. Acetic acid is common in vinegar, buffer preparation, titration exercises, and laboratory standards. Knowing how to calculate its pH helps you predict reaction behavior, choose indicators, estimate buffering regions, and understand how acids affect aqueous systems.
Authoritative references for pH, weak acids, and acetic acid data
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency: What is pH?
- NIST Chemistry WebBook
- Purdue University General Chemistry Review on Acid-Base Equilibria
Bottom line
To calculate the pH of a 0.250 M HC2H3O2 solution, model acetic acid as a weak acid, use Ka = 1.8 × 10^-5, solve the equilibrium expression for [H+], and then convert to pH. The exact result is about 2.675, so the practical answer is pH = 2.67. The percent ionization is under 1%, which confirms that acetic acid is only slightly dissociated at this concentration.