Buffer pH Calculator
Use this Buffer pH Calculator to work through the same calculation as the main calculator page with clear steps, examples, and result context.
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Run the calculator.
What This Buffer pH Calculator Helps You Do
This page helps you calculate the pH of the two buffer types people most often encounter in class and lab work: a weak acid with its conjugate base, or a weak base with its conjugate acid. That keeps the Omni workflow practical instead of forcing you to rearrange the formulas manually.
The page also reports the concentration ratio used in the calculation, so you can see whether the pH result comes from a near-equal buffer pair or a heavily skewed one.
How to Calculate Buffer pH Calculator
- Choose acid or base buffer mode: Select the conjugate pair you actually have in solution.
- Enter pKa or pKb: The dissociation constant anchors the buffer's working range.
- Enter the conjugate pair concentrations: The concentration ratio is what shifts the pH away from pKa or pKb.
- Review the result: The page reports pH and the ratio used in the calculation.
Buffer pH Calculator Formula
| Variable | Meaning | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| pKa | Acid dissociation pKa | unitless |
| pKb | Base dissociation pKb | unitless |
| [A-] | Conjugate base concentration | mol/L |
| [HA] | Weak acid concentration | mol/L |
| [salt] | Conjugate acid salt concentration | mol/L |
| [base] | Weak base concentration | mol/L |
Use the worked examples below to check how the formula behaves with real values. If the result looks unexpected, verify the unit assumptions and the meaning of each variable before interpreting the answer.
Worked Examples
- pKa: 4.76
- Base: 0.2 M
- Acid: 0.1 M
Result: pH is about 5.06.
More conjugate base than acid pushes pH above pKa.
- pKa: 6.4
- Base: 6 M
- Acid: 6 M
Result: pH is 6.4.
Equal concentrations give pH = pKa, exactly as the Omni example shows.
- pKb: 4.75
- Salt: 0.2 M
- Base: 0.1 M
Result: pH is about 8.95.
More conjugate acid salt raises pOH and lowers pH relative to the equal-ratio case.
- pKa: 7.2
- Base: 0.05 M
- Acid: 0.2 M
Result: pH is about 6.60.
A base-to-acid ratio below 1 keeps the pH below pKa.
How to Interpret Your Results
| Range | Meaning | Action |
|---|---|---|
| pH near pKa | The acid buffer sits in its best working range. | This is usually the most stable design point. |
| pH much higher than pKa | Conjugate base dominates. | Check whether the acid concentration is low enough to justify the ratio. |
| pH much lower than pKa | Weak acid dominates. | Consider increasing the conjugate base if you need a higher pH. |
Frequently Asked Questions
References
Last reviewed: March 2026