pH + buffers Flashcards
what is pH?
A measure of H+ concentration
What is the equation for pH?
How can this be rearranged to find the H+ concentration?
pH = -log10 [H+] [H+] = 10^(-pH)
Whats the difference between strong and weak acids?
Strong acids almost fully dissociate and have an equilibrium at the far right.
Weak acids partially dissociate and has much of the non-ionised acid remaining at equilibrium
What are the basic steps to calibrate a pH meter?
- rinse and dry electrode between each step
- place in pH 7.0 buffer
- place in acidic or alkaline buffer
- place back into pH 7.0 buffer
- should read within 0.05 units of 7.0
What is the equilibrium constant (Ka)?
Ka = [A-][H+] / [HA]
What is the pKa?
The log10 of the Ka.
pKa = -logKa
What is the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation?
pH = pKa + log10[A-]/[HA]
What is the main buffer in the blood and interstitial fluid?
The bicarbonate buffer system.
What is the overall equation of the bicarbonate buffer system?
CO2 + H20 -> HCO3- + H+
Why is phosphate a good buffer in biochemistry?
It has three pKa values due to it’s three ionisable groups
What is the significance of a buffer’s pKa?
The buffer is most resistant to changes in the pH at the pKa where the acid and base concentrations are equal.
What does it mean when a molecule is polar?
It has an uneven distribution of charge
What is a hydrogen bond?
When a hydrogen atom is shared between two electronegative atoms like O + N.
What does the hydrogen bonding in water allow it to do?
Allows it to act as a much larger molecule as they are constantly making and breaking bonds with other water molecules
What is Gibbs free energy? What does it tell us?
Tells us if a reaction will occur spontaneously.
If G > 0 non spontaneous
If G = 0 reaction at equilibrium
If G < 0 reaction is spontaneous