Calculate the pH of 1.0 M Ammonium Chloride
Use this interactive calculator to determine the pH of an ammonium chloride solution by modeling ammonium ion hydrolysis as a weak acid equilibrium. For a 1.0 M NH4Cl solution at 25 degrees C with ammonia Kb = 1.8 x 10^-5, the pH is about 4.63.
Results
Ready to calculate. The default inputs are set for 1.0 M ammonium chloride at 25 degrees C.
How to calculate the pH of 1.0 M ammonium chloride
Ammonium chloride, NH4Cl, is a salt that forms from a strong acid and a weak base. The chloride ion comes from hydrochloric acid, which is a strong acid, so Cl- does not significantly affect pH in water. The ammonium ion, NH4+, is the conjugate acid of ammonia, NH3, which is a weak base. That means the solution becomes acidic because NH4+ can donate a proton to water. When students or lab professionals ask how to calculate the pH of 1.0 M ammonium chloride, they are really solving a weak acid equilibrium problem.
The key chemical idea is straightforward. Ammonium chloride dissociates essentially completely in water:
NH4Cl(aq) → NH4+(aq) + Cl-(aq)
Then ammonium undergoes hydrolysis:
NH4+(aq) + H2O(l) ⇌ NH3(aq) + H3O+(aq)
Since H3O+ is produced, the pH drops below 7. To solve the problem accurately, you first determine the acid dissociation constant of NH4+. This value is not usually memorized directly. Instead, it is derived from the base dissociation constant of ammonia using the relationship:
Ka(NH4+) = Kw / Kb(NH3)
With Kb(NH3) = 1.8 x 10^-5 and Kw = 1.0 x 10^-14 at 25 degrees C:
Ka = (1.0 x 10^-14) / (1.8 x 10^-5) = 5.56 x 10^-10
Now set up the equilibrium expression for a 1.0 M ammonium ion concentration. If x is the amount of NH4+ that dissociates, then at equilibrium:
- [NH4+] = 1.0 – x
- [NH3] = x
- [H3O+] = x
Substitute into the acid equilibrium expression:
Ka = [NH3][H3O+] / [NH4+]
5.56 x 10^-10 = x^2 / (1.0 – x)
Because Ka is very small relative to the starting concentration, x is tiny compared with 1.0, so many textbooks use the weak acid approximation:
x ≈ √(Ka x C)
[H3O+] ≈ √(5.56 x 10^-10 x 1.0) = 2.36 x 10^-5 M
pH = -log10(2.36 x 10^-5) = 4.63
So the pH of 1.0 M ammonium chloride is approximately 4.63 at 25 degrees C. The exact quadratic solution produces nearly the same answer because the approximation is excellent for this concentration range.
Why ammonium chloride is acidic
A common source of confusion is that ammonium chloride contains no obvious hydroxide ions and no strong acid proton in the formula itself. The acidity arises because NH4+ is the conjugate acid of a weak base. Weak bases have conjugate acids that can donate protons to water. In contrast, the chloride ion is the conjugate base of a strong acid, so it is too weak to react meaningfully with water. The pH is therefore controlled almost entirely by NH4+.
This pattern is useful across many acid base problems:
- Salt of strong acid + strong base gives nearly neutral solution.
- Salt of strong acid + weak base gives acidic solution.
- Salt of weak acid + strong base gives basic solution.
- Salt of weak acid + weak base requires comparing Ka and Kb.
Step by step solution with the exact equation
For advanced coursework, it is often better to use the exact quadratic form instead of the square root shortcut. Starting from:
Ka = x^2 / (C – x)
Ka(C – x) = x^2
x^2 + Kax – KaC = 0
The physically meaningful root is:
x = (-Ka + √(Ka^2 + 4KaC)) / 2
When C = 1.0 M and Ka = 5.56 x 10^-10, the resulting value of x is 2.357 x 10^-5 M, which leads to pH = 4.628. Rounded appropriately, that is still 4.63. The exact and approximate answers agree closely because x is only about 0.0024 percent of the initial concentration, far below the common 5 percent criterion for approximation validity.
| Parameter | Value | Source or basis |
|---|---|---|
| NH4Cl concentration | 1.0 M | Problem statement |
| Kb of NH3 | 1.8 x 10^-5 | Standard general chemistry value at 25 degrees C |
| Kw of water | 1.0 x 10^-14 | Standard 25 degrees C value |
| Ka of NH4+ | 5.56 x 10^-10 | Calculated from Kw / Kb |
| [H3O+] exact | 2.357 x 10^-5 M | Quadratic equilibrium solution |
| pH exact | 4.628 | -log10[H3O+] |
Comparison of exact and approximate methods
Many students ask whether the square root method is good enough. In this case, yes. Because the acid is weak and the starting concentration is relatively high, the approximation gives a result almost identical to the exact calculation. The difference is less than one thousandth of a pH unit, which is much smaller than the uncertainty of many introductory lab measurements.
| Method | [H3O+] (M) | pH | Percent dissociation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Exact quadratic | 2.357 x 10^-5 | 4.628 | 0.00236% |
| Weak acid approximation | 2.357 x 10^-5 | 4.628 to 4.629 | 0.00236% |
| Difference | Less than 1 x 10^-9 M | Less than 0.001 pH unit | Negligible for most practical use |
What changes the pH in real solutions
The textbook answer assumes ideal behavior at 25 degrees C. In real laboratory work, pH can shift slightly due to temperature, ionic strength, and activity effects. A 1.0 M solution is not especially dilute, so the true measured pH may differ modestly from the ideal calculation. High ionic strength can alter activity coefficients, meaning the activity of hydrogen ion is not exactly equal to its concentration. If you are doing analytical chemistry or physical chemistry, this distinction matters.
Still, for standard homework and most teaching lab calculations, the accepted answer remains about 4.63. If a teacher expects the approximation route, they usually want to see these steps:
- Recognize NH4Cl as a salt of a weak base and strong acid.
- Identify NH4+ as the acidic species.
- Convert Kb of NH3 into Ka of NH4+ using Ka = Kw / Kb.
- Set up the ICE table for NH4+ hydrolysis.
- Solve for [H3O+].
- Take the negative log to find pH.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Treating NH4Cl as neutral. It is not neutral in water because NH4+ is acidic.
- Using Kb directly without conversion. Since NH4+ acts as an acid, Ka is the needed equilibrium constant.
- Including chloride hydrolysis. Cl- is the conjugate base of a strong acid and is negligible here.
- Forgetting temperature dependence. Kw and Kb values depend on temperature.
- Ignoring units. If concentration is entered in mM, convert to M before calculating.
How concentration affects ammonium chloride pH
As ammonium chloride concentration decreases, the solution becomes less acidic because there is less NH4+ available to hydrolyze. However, the change is not linear. Since weak acid behavior often follows a square root relationship for [H+], increasing concentration by a factor of 100 does not lower the pH by 2 full units. Instead, pH changes more gradually. This is one reason charting pH versus concentration is so helpful for understanding weak electrolyte systems.
For example, using the same Ka value:
- 0.001 M NH4Cl gives a pH around 6.13
- 0.01 M NH4Cl gives a pH around 5.63
- 0.10 M NH4Cl gives a pH around 5.13
- 1.0 M NH4Cl gives a pH around 4.63
This pattern matches the logarithmic nature of pH. Each tenfold increase in concentration lowers the pH by roughly 0.5 units for this weak acid system. That is a useful mental shortcut when estimating answers quickly.
When you would use this in practice
Calculations like this appear in general chemistry, analytical chemistry, environmental chemistry, and laboratory quality control. Ammonium salts are common in buffer preparation, fertilizer chemistry, biological systems, and industrial formulations. Even if the exact salt concentration or temperature changes, the method remains the same. Once you understand the logic for NH4Cl, you can handle many other weak acid salt calculations with confidence.
Environmental and water chemistry references also emphasize that pH is a central parameter affecting solubility, biological activity, corrosion, and reaction rates. If you are validating a measured pH against a theoretical expectation, remember that concentrated electrolyte solutions can deviate from ideal behavior. Nonetheless, the weak acid equilibrium model is the right starting point and usually the answer expected in coursework.
Authoritative references for pH and acid base chemistry
- USGS: pH and Water
- U.S. EPA: pH Overview
- Purdue University: Acid Dissociation Constants and Equilibria
Final answer
If you need the direct answer to the original question, the pH of 1.0 M ammonium chloride is about 4.63 at 25 degrees C, assuming Kb for ammonia is 1.8 x 10^-5 and ideal solution behavior. Use the calculator above if you want to adjust concentration, constants, or display precision and see the result visualized on a chart.