Calculate the pH of a 1 M NH4Cl Solution
Use this premium calculator to determine the acidity of ammonium chloride solutions using the exact weak-acid equilibrium equation or the common square-root approximation. Default values are set for a 1.0 M NH4Cl solution at 25 degrees Celsius.
How to calculate the pH of a 1 M NH4Cl solution
To calculate the pH of a 1 M NH4Cl solution, you need to understand that ammonium chloride is a salt formed from a weak base, ammonia (NH3), and a strong acid, hydrochloric acid (HCl). Because HCl is a strong acid, chloride ion (Cl-) does not significantly affect the pH. The chemistry is controlled by the ammonium ion, NH4+, which acts as a weak acid in water. This means the solution is acidic, not neutral.
When NH4Cl dissolves in water, it dissociates essentially completely into NH4+ and Cl-. The chloride ion is the conjugate base of a strong acid, so it does not appreciably hydrolyze. The ammonium ion, however, can donate a proton to water according to the equilibrium:
The appearance of H3O+ is what lowers the pH. To quantify that acidity, you calculate the acid dissociation constant of ammonium, Ka, using the relation between conjugate pairs:
At 25 degrees Celsius, a widely used value for the base dissociation constant of ammonia is Kb = 1.8 × 10-5, while the ion-product constant of water is Kw = 1.0 × 10-14. Therefore:
Step-by-step equilibrium setup
For a 1.0 M NH4Cl solution, the initial concentration of NH4+ is 1.0 M. Let x represent the concentration of H3O+ generated by ammonium hydrolysis. Then the equilibrium concentrations are:
- [NH4+] = 1.0 – x
- [NH3] = x
- [H3O+] = x
Substitute these into the acid equilibrium expression:
Now insert Ka = 5.56 × 10-10:
Because Ka is very small relative to the initial concentration, x will be tiny compared with 1.0. In many classroom and laboratory situations, the approximation 1.0 – x ≈ 1.0 is acceptable. That gives:
Since x equals [H3O+], calculate pH:
So the pH of a 1 M NH4Cl solution is approximately 4.63 at 25 degrees Celsius. If you solve the quadratic equation exactly, you obtain nearly the same result because the approximation error is negligible at this concentration.
Why NH4Cl is acidic instead of neutral
Students often expect salts to be neutral because they come from acid-base reactions. That is only true for salts formed from a strong acid and a strong base, such as NaCl. NH4Cl behaves differently because one of its ions is the conjugate acid of a weak base. NH4+ retains enough acidity to react with water and release H3O+.
A practical way to classify salt solutions is to identify the acid and base from which the salt is derived:
- Strong acid + strong base gives a neutral salt.
- Strong acid + weak base gives an acidic salt.
- Weak acid + strong base gives a basic salt.
- Weak acid + weak base requires comparison of Ka and Kb.
Because ammonium chloride comes from HCl and NH3, it falls into the second category. That is why a 1 M NH4Cl solution has a pH well below 7.
Exact versus approximate calculation
For most dilute and moderate weak-acid systems, the square-root approximation works well when x is less than 5 percent of the initial concentration. In the case of 1 M NH4Cl, the computed x is only 2.36 × 10-5 M, which is far less than 5 percent of 1.0 M. Therefore, the approximation is excellent.
Still, it is good chemical practice to understand the exact expression. Rearranging the equilibrium equation gives:
The positive root is:
Substituting Ka = 5.56 × 10-10 and C = 1.0 M gives x ≈ 2.36 × 10-5 M and pH ≈ 4.63. The exact and approximate values match to two decimal places.
| Parameter | Value at 25 degrees Celsius | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Kb for NH3 | 1.8 × 10-5 | Base strength of ammonia in water |
| Kw for water | 1.0 × 10-14 | Autoionization constant of water |
| Ka for NH4+ | 5.56 × 10-10 | Acid strength of ammonium ion |
| [H3O+] in 1 M NH4Cl | 2.36 × 10-5 M | Hydronium concentration from hydrolysis |
| pH of 1 M NH4Cl | 4.63 | Resulting acidity of the solution |
How concentration changes the pH
The pH of ammonium chloride depends on concentration. A more concentrated NH4Cl solution contains more NH4+, so hydrolysis generates more H3O+, lowering the pH. The relation is not linear, though, because pH is logarithmic and weak-acid equilibrium follows a square-root dependence when the approximation holds.
This is important in laboratory preparation, analytical chemistry, and teaching problems. If you prepare a 0.10 M NH4Cl solution instead of a 1.0 M one, the pH rises because the available ammonium concentration is lower. If you prepare a 2.0 M solution, the pH falls slightly further. The same acid-base principles apply, but the numerical value shifts with concentration.
| NH4Cl concentration | Approximate [H3O+] | Approximate pH | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.01 M | 2.36 × 10-6 M | 5.63 | Weakly acidic, closer to neutral |
| 0.10 M | 7.46 × 10-6 M | 5.13 | Clearly acidic |
| 1.00 M | 2.36 × 10-5 M | 4.63 | Moderately acidic for a salt solution |
| 2.00 M | 3.33 × 10-5 M | 4.48 | Slightly more acidic than 1.00 M |
Common mistakes when solving NH4Cl pH problems
- Using the Kb of NH3 directly in the acid equation without converting to Ka.
- Treating NH4Cl as neutral because it is a salt.
- Forgetting that Cl- is the conjugate base of a strong acid and has negligible basicity.
- Assuming pH equals 7 because the solution contains no obvious strong acid in the final mixture.
- Rounding too early and introducing avoidable errors in pH.
When the simple textbook answer may change
The standard answer of pH ≈ 4.63 assumes ideal behavior and a temperature of 25 degrees Celsius. In highly precise work, chemists may need to account for activity coefficients, ionic strength effects, and temperature dependence of equilibrium constants. In concentrated electrolytes, activities can deviate from concentrations. In practical classroom chemistry, however, using concentrations and the tabulated Kb value of ammonia is the accepted approach.
Another subtle point is that pH measurements made with a real glass electrode may differ slightly from the ideal calculated value. Instrument calibration, solution temperature, junction potentials, and ionic strength all contribute. That does not invalidate the equilibrium calculation. It simply reminds us that measured pH and ideal calculated pH can differ slightly in real systems.
Why this calculation matters in chemistry and industry
Ammonium salts appear in agriculture, environmental chemistry, food chemistry, industrial processing, and laboratory buffers. Understanding the pH of NH4Cl is useful in predicting solubility, metal-ion behavior, corrosion tendencies, and biological compatibility. In qualitative analysis, ammonium salts and ammonia are also central to buffer systems. The NH4+/NH3 pair is one of the classic examples used to teach conjugate acid-base behavior.
In environmental settings, ammonium chemistry can influence nitrogen speciation and toxicity. In educational laboratories, NH4Cl frequently appears in equilibrium demonstrations and acid-base calculations because it neatly illustrates how a salt can alter pH through hydrolysis.
Quick summary formula for the pH of NH4Cl
If you want a compact method for standard homework or calculator use, follow this sequence:
- Write the hydrolysis reaction: NH4+ + H2O ⇌ NH3 + H3O+.
- Calculate Ka from Ka = Kw / Kb.
- Use x = √(Ka × C) if the approximation is valid.
- Set [H3O+] = x.
- Compute pH = -log10[H3O+].
For a 1 M NH4Cl solution at 25 degrees Celsius with Kb(NH3) = 1.8 × 10-5, the final result is:
Authoritative references for acid-base constants and water chemistry
- National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
- Chemistry LibreTexts educational resource
Educational note: The calculator above uses the standard equilibrium treatment for ammonium hydrolysis and is intended for chemistry learning, homework verification, and fast reference.