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Calculate the mass of acid and base required to prepare a buffer at a given pH.
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Buffer Capacity: Definition and Formula Derivation
A buffer solution can maintain an almost constant pH when a small amount of acid or base is added. The quantitative measure of this resistance to pH changes is called the buffer capacity.
1. Definitions of Buffer Capacity
Buffer capacity can be defined in multiple ways. One approach is: "the maximum amount of either strong acid or strong base that can be added before a significant change in the pH will occur." However, this begs the question of what constitutes a "significant" change. In some cases, even 1 pH unit might not matter, while in biological systems a 0.1 unit change can be critical.
Another definition states:
"The quantity of strong acid or base that must be added to change the pH of one liter of solution by one pH unit."
This has practical uses but can give different values for acid vs. base additions
Ideally, buffer capacity should be the same whether acid or base is added. One suitable definition is:
where
2. Derivation of the Buffer Capacity Formula
The derivation presented here is based on Adam Hulanicki's book
Reakcje kwasów i zasad w chemii analitycznej
Assume:
- The strong base added is monoprotic.
- The total volume is 1 L, so "concentration" and "number of moles" are numerically the same.
2.1 Charge Balance
Charge balance of the solution
Here,
2.2 Total Buffer Concentration
The total concentration of the buffer,
2.3 Acid Dissociation Relationship
From the acid dissociation constant:
we can rearrange to get:
2.4 Combining Equations
Combining charge balance
where
2.5 Derivative and Buffer Capacity
By differentiating
and through further manipulations:
The exact final form
3. Multiple Buffers
If several buffering systems are present, their individual capacities add up:
4. Practical Takeaways
-
Buffer capacity is highest around
for a simple acid/base buffer pair. -
Extremely acidic or basic solutions can still have significant "capacity" to resist small pH changes,
due to the large presence of either
or . -
In real-world scenarios
, different buffers work together, and the total buffer capacity is the sum of each buffer’s contribution.
Thus, while "classical" buffers