Calculate pH of Stock Sodium Acetate Solution
Estimate the pH of a sodium acetate stock solution from either molarity or from the mass you used to prepare the solution. This calculator applies weak-base hydrolysis of acetate in water and reports concentration, Kb, hydroxide concentration, pOH, pH, and percent hydrolysis.
How to calculate pH of stock sodium acetate solution
When scientists, students, and lab technicians need to calculate pH of stock sodium acetate solution, they are usually solving a classic weak-base hydrolysis problem. Sodium acetate is the sodium salt of acetic acid. In water, the sodium ion acts mostly as a spectator ion, while the acetate ion reacts slightly with water to produce hydroxide ions. Because hydroxide is generated, a sodium acetate solution is mildly basic, usually with a pH above 7.
The key point is that sodium acetate is not a strong base like sodium hydroxide. Instead, it is the conjugate base of a weak acid. That means the pH depends on the salt concentration and on the acid dissociation constant of acetic acid, usually written as Ka. Once Ka is known, you can calculate the base dissociation constant of acetate, Kb, using the relationship:
Kb = Kw / Ka, where Kw = 1.0 × 10-14 at 25 degrees C.
For acetic acid, if Ka = 1.8 × 10-5, then Kb for acetate is approximately 5.56 × 10-10.
That Kb value is what drives the pH calculation for a stock sodium acetate solution prepared in water. In practical lab work, you may know the concentration directly, such as 0.1 M sodium acetate, or you may know the mass and final volume used in the prep. In either case, the first goal is to determine the actual acetate concentration in mol/L.
Why sodium acetate solution is basic
Sodium acetate dissociates nearly completely in water:
CH3COONa → Na+ + CH3COO–
The acetate ion then hydrolyzes:
CH3COO– + H2O ⇌ CH3COOH + OH–
This reaction generates hydroxide, so the pH rises above neutral. The extent of that rise depends mainly on concentration. More concentrated sodium acetate solutions have somewhat higher pH values, though the increase is not linear.
Core calculation method
- Determine sodium acetate concentration, C, in mol/L.
- Choose a Ka value for acetic acid, often 1.8 × 10-5 near 25 degrees C.
- Calculate Kb = 1.0 × 10-14 / Ka.
- Set up the hydrolysis equilibrium: Kb = x2 / (C – x).
- Solve for x = [OH–]. For quick estimates at moderate concentration, use x ≈ √(Kb × C).
- Calculate pOH = -log[OH–].
- Calculate pH = 14 – pOH.
Because sodium acetate is a weak base, the approximation x ≈ √(KbC) is usually very good for common stock concentrations like 0.01 M, 0.1 M, or 1.0 M. However, a more careful calculator should solve the quadratic expression exactly. That is what the calculator above does.
Example: 0.1 M sodium acetate stock
Suppose your stock solution is 0.1 M sodium acetate and you use Ka = 1.8 × 10-5.
- Ka = 1.8 × 10-5
- Kb = 1.0 × 10-14 / 1.8 × 10-5 = 5.56 × 10-10
- C = 0.1 M
- [OH–] ≈ √(5.56 × 10-10 × 0.1) ≈ 7.45 × 10-6 M
- pOH ≈ 5.13
- pH ≈ 8.87
This result matches what many chemists expect: a 0.1 M sodium acetate stock is mildly basic, not strongly alkaline.
Converting mass to concentration correctly
Many pH errors come from using the wrong molar mass. Sodium acetate may be supplied as the anhydrous salt or as sodium acetate trihydrate. Those are not interchangeable in calculations. If you weigh the trihydrate but calculate as if it were anhydrous, your actual concentration will be lower than expected, and the pH estimate will be off as well.
| Form of sodium acetate | Chemical formula | Molar mass (g/mol) | Acetate salt fraction by mass | Practical impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anhydrous | CH3COONa | 82.0343 | 100.00% | Most direct conversion from mass to moles |
| Trihydrate | CH3COONa · 3H2O | 136.079 | 60.29% | Requires more mass to make the same molarity |
For example, to make 1.0 L of 0.1 M solution, you need 0.1 moles of sodium acetate. That corresponds to about 8.20 g of anhydrous sodium acetate or about 13.61 g of sodium acetate trihydrate. If you accidentally dissolve 8.20 g of the trihydrate in 1.0 L, your solution will not be 0.1 M. It will be much weaker.
Typical pH values at common stock concentrations
The following table gives representative pH values for sodium acetate solutions at 25 degrees C using Ka = 1.8 × 10-5. These numbers are very useful for quick checks against experimental readings.
| Sodium acetate concentration (M) | Kb used | Approx. [OH-] (M) | Approx. pOH | Approx. pH |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.010 | 5.56 × 10-10 | 2.36 × 10-6 | 5.63 | 8.37 |
| 0.050 | 5.56 × 10-10 | 5.27 × 10-6 | 5.28 | 8.72 |
| 0.100 | 5.56 × 10-10 | 7.45 × 10-6 | 5.13 | 8.87 |
| 0.500 | 5.56 × 10-10 | 1.67 × 10-5 | 4.78 | 9.22 |
| 1.000 | 5.56 × 10-10 | 2.36 × 10-5 | 4.63 | 9.37 |
These values demonstrate an important trend: increasing the concentration by a factor of 100 does not increase pH by 100 percent. Because the chemistry depends on the square root of concentration for weak-base hydrolysis, pH changes more gradually.
What this calculator assumes
- Sodium acetate fully dissociates into sodium and acetate ions.
- The only acid-base process considered is acetate hydrolysis in water.
- Water autoionization is represented through Kw = 1.0 × 10-14.
- The Ka you enter is appropriate for your chosen temperature and conditions.
- The solution is dilute enough that activities are approximated by concentrations.
These assumptions are reasonable for many routine educational and laboratory calculations. At higher ionic strengths, or when very high accuracy is required, activity coefficients become important and measured pH may differ from the idealized calculation.
Factors that can shift real measured pH
Even if your math is perfect, the pH meter might show a slightly different value. That does not always mean the calculation is wrong. Real solutions are affected by several variables:
- Temperature: Ka and Kw both change with temperature.
- Ionic strength: Concentrated stocks can deviate from ideal behavior.
- CO2 absorption: Exposure to air can acidify water over time.
- Meter calibration: Poor calibration can introduce systematic error.
- Hydrate mismatch: Using trihydrate mass with anhydrous molar mass is a common prep mistake.
- Buffer contamination: If acetic acid is already present, the system behaves more like an acetate buffer than a pure sodium acetate solution.
Difference between pure sodium acetate solution and acetate buffer
A frequent source of confusion is the difference between a sodium acetate stock and an acetate buffer. A pure sodium acetate solution contains the conjugate base with no intentionally added acetic acid. In contrast, an acetate buffer contains both sodium acetate and acetic acid in known proportions. For buffers, the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation is commonly used:
pH = pKa + log([acetate] / [acetic acid])
That equation is excellent for true buffer mixtures, but it is not the correct starting point for a stock solution that contains only sodium acetate in water. For a pure stock sodium acetate solution, weak-base hydrolysis is the right model.
How to use the calculator above effectively
- If you already know the molarity, select Known molarity and enter the concentration.
- If you prepared the solution by weighing solid, select Mass and final volume.
- Choose whether you used anhydrous sodium acetate or the trihydrate.
- Enter the final volume after dissolution, not the initial water volume.
- Keep the default Ka unless your protocol specifies a different literature value.
- Click Calculate pH to display the result and a concentration trend chart.
Authoritative chemistry references
For reliable chemical identity, physical data, and pH background, consult these authoritative resources:
- NIH PubChem: Sodium acetate
- NIH PubChem: Acetic acid
- U.S. EPA: pH overview and environmental significance
Best practices for laboratory preparation
If your application involves molecular biology, chromatography, or buffer preparation, always document the exact sodium acetate form, lot, and concentration method. Write down whether the reagent was anhydrous or trihydrate, whether the pH was calculated or meter-verified, and whether any acetic acid was subsequently added. This prevents a common workflow problem in which one person labels a bottle as “0.1 M sodium acetate” while another assumes it is already a pH-adjusted acetate buffer.
For the most reproducible stock preparation:
- Use an analytical balance for mass measurements.
- Transfer quantitatively to a volumetric flask when possible.
- Bring to final volume only after complete dissolution.
- Mix thoroughly before sampling for pH measurement.
- Calibrate the pH meter with fresh standards near the expected pH range.
Bottom line
To calculate pH of stock sodium acetate solution, first determine the concentration of acetate, then use the hydrolysis equilibrium of the acetate ion. The most important formula sequence is Kb = Kw / Ka, followed by solving for hydroxide concentration and converting that value into pOH and pH. For a typical 0.1 M stock at 25 degrees C with acetic acid Ka of 1.8 × 10-5, the expected pH is about 8.87. The calculator on this page automates the exact steps and helps you visualize how pH changes as stock concentration changes.