Ka from pH Calculator
Calculate the acid dissociation constant, pKa, percent dissociation, and equilibrium concentrations for a weak monoprotic acid using measured pH and initial acid concentration.
Results
Enter your values and click Calculate Ka to see the dissociation constant, pKa, and equilibrium concentrations.
How to calculate Ka from pH accurately
Calculating Ka from pH is one of the most useful equilibrium skills in general chemistry, analytical chemistry, environmental chemistry, and biochemistry. If you know the pH of a weak acid solution and the initial concentration of the acid, you can work backward to estimate how strongly that acid donates protons in water. This matters because Ka tells you far more than pH alone. pH tells you the acidity of one specific solution under one specific set of conditions, while Ka expresses the intrinsic tendency of the acid to dissociate.
In practical terms, students often measure pH in the lab, then use that value to calculate hydrogen ion concentration. Once you know the equilibrium concentration of H+, the weak-acid equilibrium expression lets you solve for Ka. This page is designed around the most common classroom case: a monoprotic weak acid, written as HA, dissolving in water according to the reaction HA ⇌ H+ + A–.
The core idea behind the calculation
For a weak monoprotic acid, the equilibrium expression is:
Ka = [H+][A–] / [HA]
If the acid starts at concentration C and dissociates by an amount x, then at equilibrium:
- [H+] = x
- [A–] = x
- [HA] = C – x
Substitute these into the equilibrium expression and you get:
Ka = x2 / (C – x)
Because pH is defined as pH = -log[H+], you can convert pH into hydrogen ion concentration with:
[H+] = 10-pH
That means your full workflow is simple:
- Measure or enter the pH.
- Convert pH to [H+].
- Assume [A–] = [H+] for a monoprotic weak acid.
- Subtract [H+] from the initial concentration to find the remaining [HA].
- Calculate Ka.
Worked example: Ka from pH for a 0.100 M weak acid
Suppose a 0.100 M weak acid solution has a measured pH of 2.87. First convert pH to hydrogen ion concentration:
[H+] = 10-2.87 = 1.35 × 10-3 M
For a monoprotic weak acid, [A–] is also 1.35 × 10-3 M. The equilibrium concentration of undissociated acid is:
[HA] = 0.100 – 0.00135 = 0.09865 M
Now substitute into the Ka expression:
Ka = (1.35 × 10-3)2 / 0.09865 ≈ 1.85 × 10-5
Finally, if you want pKa, compute:
pKa = -log(Ka) ≈ 4.73
That result is very close to the accepted value for acetic acid near room temperature, which is why pH-based back-calculations are so useful for identifying or verifying weak acids in instructional labs.
Why concentration matters when calculating Ka from pH
A common mistake is thinking that pH alone is enough to determine Ka. It is not. You also need the initial concentration of the weak acid. Two solutions can have similar pH values but very different Ka values if their starting concentrations are different. That is because Ka depends on the ratio of products to reactant at equilibrium, not merely on the hydrogen ion concentration by itself.
For example, if pH = 3.00, then [H+] = 1.00 × 10-3 M. If the initial acid concentration was 0.010 M, then Ka would be:
Ka = (1.00 × 10-3)2 / (0.010 – 0.001) = 1.11 × 10-4
But if the initial concentration was 0.100 M, then:
Ka = (1.00 × 10-3)2 / (0.100 – 0.001) = 1.01 × 10-5
Same pH, very different Ka. This is exactly why a robust calculator asks for both values.
Common weak acids and reference Ka values
The table below shows widely used approximate acid dissociation statistics at about 25 C. These are useful for checking whether your calculated value looks realistic.
| Acid | Formula | Approx. Ka at 25 C | Approx. pKa |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acetic acid | CH3COOH | 1.8 × 10-5 | 4.76 |
| Formic acid | HCOOH | 1.8 × 10-4 | 3.75 |
| Benzoic acid | C6H5COOH | 6.3 × 10-5 | 4.20 |
| Hydrofluoric acid | HF | 6.8 × 10-4 | 3.17 |
| Hypochlorous acid | HOCl | 3.0 × 10-8 | 7.52 |
If your calculated Ka is close to one of these values, it may help you infer the likely identity of the acid or confirm the quality of your pH measurement.
How pH changes map to hydrogen ion concentration
Because pH is logarithmic, even a small pH difference can represent a large change in [H+]. This is important when calculating Ka, because tiny errors in pH can propagate into your equilibrium calculation.
| pH | [H+] in mol/L | Relative acidity vs pH 7 |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1.0 × 10-1 | 1,000,000 times more acidic |
| 2 | 1.0 × 10-2 | 100,000 times more acidic |
| 3 | 1.0 × 10-3 | 10,000 times more acidic |
| 4 | 1.0 × 10-4 | 1,000 times more acidic |
| 7 | 1.0 × 10-7 | Neutral reference point |
One unit of pH corresponds to a tenfold change in hydrogen ion concentration. So if your pH meter drifts by 0.10 pH units, that is not a trivial difference. It can alter [H+] by about 26%, which then affects the Ka value you compute.
Percent dissociation and what it tells you
After calculating Ka, many chemists also examine percent dissociation:
% dissociation = ([H+] / C) × 100
This tells you what fraction of the initial acid molecules actually donated a proton. Weak acids generally dissociate only partially, often by a few percent or less at moderate concentrations. Percent dissociation usually increases when the acid solution is diluted. That does not mean Ka changes. It means the equilibrium composition shifts while the intrinsic equilibrium constant remains the same at a fixed temperature.
Assumptions behind this calculator
- The acid is monoprotic, meaning each molecule donates one proton.
- The solution behaves ideally enough that concentration is an acceptable approximation for activity.
- The pH value reflects the weak acid equilibrium accurately.
- Water autoionization is negligible compared with the acid-derived [H+].
- Temperature effects are not corrected beyond your measured pH input.
These assumptions are reasonable for many classroom and routine lab problems, but they become less reliable in very dilute solutions, high ionic strength systems, mixed buffers, or polyprotic acid systems. If you are working in a research context, activity coefficients and advanced equilibrium modeling may be necessary.
Step-by-step lab advice for better Ka calculations
- Calibrate your pH meter with fresh buffers before measuring.
- Record temperature, because pH and Ka are temperature sensitive.
- Use the actual prepared concentration, not the intended one on the recipe sheet.
- Avoid contamination from rinse water or residual base in glassware.
- Take multiple pH readings and average them if your protocol allows.
- Check whether your acid is monoprotic before using this simplified model.
Following these steps can dramatically improve the reliability of your calculated Ka, especially when you are comparing your result to literature values.
Authoritative references for pH and acid chemistry
If you want to validate measurements or review official guidance on pH standards and acid-related data, these sources are excellent starting points:
- NIST: pH Values of Standard Reference Materials
- U.S. EPA: pH overview and environmental significance
- NIH PubChem: chemical property database
These resources are helpful when you need trusted definitions, pH reference information, or verified compound data while interpreting Ka results.
Final takeaway
To calculate Ka from pH, you need both the measured pH and the initial acid concentration. Convert pH to [H+], treat that value as the equilibrium amount dissociated for a monoprotic weak acid, determine the remaining undissociated acid, and then apply the equation Ka = x2 / (C – x). From there, you can also find pKa and percent dissociation.
This approach is simple, fast, and chemically meaningful, which is why it appears so often in labs and coursework. Use the calculator above when you want a quick, visual, and accurate estimate of Ka from pH without manually rebuilding the ICE table each time.