Calculate the pH of a 0.60 M H2SO3
Use this premium sulfurous acid calculator to estimate pH, hydrogen ion concentration, percent ionization, and species distribution using an exact quadratic method for the first dissociation and a weak-acid estimate for the second.
Sulfurous Acid pH Calculator
Default values are set to calculate the pH of a 0.60 M H2SO3 solution. This calculator treats sulfurous acid as a diprotic weak acid, with the first dissociation controlling the pH.
How to calculate the pH of a 0.60 M H2SO3 solution
If you need to calculate the pH of a 0.60 M H2SO3 solution, the key is to recognize that H2SO3, sulfurous acid, is a diprotic weak acid. That means it can donate two protons, but it does not fully dissociate in water the way a strong acid does. In practical pH calculations, the first dissociation of sulfurous acid contributes the overwhelming majority of the hydrogen ions, while the second dissociation is much smaller and usually has a negligible effect on the final pH at moderate to high concentrations.
Sulfurous acid is often discussed in general chemistry when comparing weak acid equilibria, polyprotic acids, and approximation methods. Unlike sulfuric acid, which has a very strong first dissociation, sulfurous acid behaves much more like a typical weak acid. For a 0.60 M solution, you should generally solve the first equilibrium using the acid dissociation constant Ka1 and either apply the quadratic formula or check whether the square root approximation is acceptable.
Step 1: Write the dissociation equations
Sulfurous acid ionizes in two stages:
- H2SO3 ⇌ H+ + HSO3-
- HSO3- ⇌ H+ + SO32-
The first dissociation constant is much larger than the second, which is why the first step controls the pH. A common textbook value for Ka1 is approximately 1.54 × 10-2, while Ka2 is often taken as 6.4 × 10-8. Because Ka2 is so much smaller, the second proton is released only to a tiny extent when compared with the first.
Step 2: Set up an ICE table for the first dissociation
Start with an initial sulfurous acid concentration of 0.60 M:
- Initial [H2SO3] = 0.60 M
- Initial [H+] = 0
- Initial [HSO3-] = 0
Let x be the amount of H2SO3 that dissociates in the first step. At equilibrium:
- [H2SO3] = 0.60 – x
- [H+] = x
- [HSO3-] = x
Plug these values into the Ka1 expression:
Ka1 = [H+][HSO3-] / [H2SO3] = x2 / (0.60 – x)
Using Ka1 = 0.0154:
0.0154 = x2 / (0.60 – x)
Step 3: Solve the equilibrium expression
Multiply both sides by (0.60 – x):
0.0154(0.60 – x) = x2
0.00924 – 0.0154x = x2
Rearranging:
x2 + 0.0154x – 0.00924 = 0
Solving this quadratic gives:
x ≈ 0.0888 M
Since x represents [H+] from the dominant dissociation step:
pH = -log(0.0888) ≈ 1.05
Why the second dissociation usually does not change the pH much
Students often wonder whether they need to include both protons because sulfurous acid is diprotic. The answer is technically yes in a complete equilibrium model, but in most classroom and practical calculations, the second dissociation contributes almost nothing to the hydrogen ion concentration at this concentration level.
Once the first dissociation has already produced about 0.0888 M H+, the equilibrium for the second dissociation is suppressed by the common ion effect. A simple estimate for the second stage gives:
Ka2 = [H+][SO32-] / [HSO3-]
Because [H+] and [HSO3-] are both already close to x from the first dissociation, the additional amount formed in the second dissociation is extremely tiny, on the order of 10-8 M. That is nowhere near large enough to significantly shift a pH that is already around 1.
Exact method versus approximation
In weak-acid chemistry, many instructors introduce the approximation x ≪ C, which simplifies the equilibrium expression:
x ≈ √(Ka × C)
For 0.60 M H2SO3:
x ≈ √(0.0154 × 0.60) = √0.00924 ≈ 0.0961 M
That leads to:
pH ≈ -log(0.0961) ≈ 1.02
This is close to the exact answer, but not ideal. The approximation overestimates dissociation because x is not really tiny compared with 0.60 M. In fact, x/C is nearly 15%, which exceeds the common 5% guideline. So for a polished answer, the quadratic method is the better choice.
| Method | Estimated [H+] (M) | Estimated pH | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Exact quadratic using Ka1 = 0.0154 | 0.0888 | 1.05 | Best method for a 0.60 M solution |
| Weak-acid approximation √(KaC) | 0.0961 | 1.02 | Slightly overestimates ionization |
| Incorrect full 2H+ strong-acid assumption | 1.20 | -0.08 | Completely wrong for sulfurous acid |
Important chemistry ideas behind this problem
1. Sulfurous acid is weak, not strong
One of the most common mistakes is treating H2SO3 like sulfuric acid. Sulfuric acid, H2SO4, has a strong first dissociation. Sulfurous acid does not. If you assume complete dissociation of both protons, your pH answer becomes wildly unrealistic for this system.
2. Concentration matters
At 0.60 M, sulfurous acid is concentrated enough that you cannot casually assume the change x is negligible compared with the initial concentration. This is exactly the kind of scenario where the quadratic formula improves accuracy. In more dilute solutions, the same acid constants would produce different percent ionization and a different pH.
3. Polyprotic acids dissociate stepwise
Polyprotic acids lose protons one at a time, and each proton has its own equilibrium constant. These constants usually become much smaller after each dissociation because removing an additional proton from an increasingly negative species is energetically less favorable.
Comparison table: sulfurous acid versus other common acids
The table below helps put sulfurous acid in context. The Ka and pKa values shown are standard reference values commonly reported in chemistry data tables. These figures illustrate why sulfurous acid is stronger than acetic acid but far weaker than a strong mineral acid in practice.
| Acid | Formula | Representative Ka or behavior | Approximate pKa | Relative strength note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sulfurous acid | H2SO3 | Ka1 ≈ 1.54 × 10-2 | pKa1 ≈ 1.81 | Moderately weak acid, stronger than many organic acids |
| Acetic acid | CH3COOH | Ka ≈ 1.8 × 10-5 | pKa ≈ 4.76 | Much weaker than sulfurous acid |
| Carbonic acid | H2CO3 | Ka1 ≈ 4.3 × 10-7 | pKa1 ≈ 6.37 | Far weaker first dissociation |
| Sulfuric acid | H2SO4 | First proton dissociates essentially completely | Very low first pKa | Strong acid in its first dissociation |
Worked summary for exam use
- Write the first dissociation: H2SO3 ⇌ H+ + HSO3-
- Use an ICE table with initial concentration 0.60 M.
- Set up Ka1 = x2 / (0.60 – x)
- Substitute Ka1 = 0.0154
- Solve the quadratic to get x ≈ 0.0888
- Compute pH = -log(0.0888) ≈ 1.05
- State that Ka2 is too small to significantly alter the pH
Common mistakes to avoid
- Assuming H2SO3 is a strong acid and fully dissociates
- Multiplying the concentration by 2 to estimate [H+]
- Ignoring the need for a quadratic when percent ionization is not small
- Using Ka2 as though it competes equally with Ka1
- Confusing H2SO3 with H2SO4
What percent ionization tells you
Percent ionization helps show how much of the initial acid actually dissociated:
Percent ionization = ([H+] / initial concentration) × 100
Using the exact value:
Percent ionization = (0.0888 / 0.60) × 100 ≈ 14.8%
That is another reason the small-x approximation is not ideal here. When nearly 15% of the acid ionizes in the first step, you should not simplify away x in the denominator without at least checking the error.
Reference-quality reasoning and authoritative sources
If you want to verify acid-base methods or consult standard educational references, these authoritative resources are useful:
- LibreTexts Chemistry for acid-base equilibrium explanations
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for pH and aqueous chemistry background
- NIST Chemistry WebBook for chemistry data and reference material
Bottom line
To calculate the pH of a 0.60 M H2SO3 solution, model sulfurous acid as a weak diprotic acid and focus primarily on the first dissociation. Using Ka1 = 1.54 × 10-2, the exact quadratic solution gives [H+] ≈ 0.0888 M and a pH of approximately 1.05. The second dissociation contributes an extremely small additional amount of hydrogen ion and does not materially change the result.
For homework, lab prep, or exam review, the most defensible answer is therefore: pH ≈ 1.05. If your instructor allows approximations, you may see an answer around 1.02, but the exact method is more accurate for this concentration.