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A streamlined tool for calculating the pH of buffer solutions from conjugate acid–base ratios.
The chemistry of acids and bases had been studied for centuries, but the quantitative treatment of buffer solutions — mixtures that resist changes in pH — required a mathematical framework that could relate measurable concentrations to the equilibrium properties of weak acids and bases. In the early twentieth century, physiologists and chemists were particularly interested in the pH of blood, which must remain in the narrow range of 7.35–7.45 for normal metabolic function. The challenge was to develop an equation that connected the acid dissociation constant (Ka) of a weak acid to the pH of a solution containing both the acid and its conjugate base in known proportions.
The central question that motivated this work was deceptively simple: given a solution containing a weak acid and its conjugate base, how can one quickly predict its pH without solving a full quadratic equilibrium expression? The Henderson-Hasselbalch equation provides precisely this shortcut, and it remains one of the most frequently applied relationships on the AP Chemistry exam.
Before applying the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation, you must have a firm grasp of several interrelated ideas: the nature of weak acid equilibria, the concept of a conjugate acid–base pair, and the definition of a buffer solution. These concepts form the foundation upon which the equation rests, and understanding them deeply will prevent common algebraic and conceptual errors.
The diagram above captures the essential graphical relationship encoded by the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation. Notice that the curve is steepest far from the midpoint and flattest at pH = pKa. This flat region is the buffer zone, typically effective within ±1 pH unit of the pKa. The logarithmic nature of the equation explains why changing the ratio [A⁻]/[HA] by a factor of 10 shifts pH by exactly one unit.
The Henderson-Hasselbalch equation is derived directly from the equilibrium expression for a weak acid. Starting from the Ka expression and taking the negative logarithm of both sides yields a remarkably compact formula.
Rearranging for [H⁺]: [H⁺] = Ka × [HA] / [A⁻]. Taking the negative logarithm of both sides gives −log[H⁺] = −logKa − log([HA]/[A⁻]). Recognizing that −log[H⁺] = pH and −logKa = pKa, and using the log rule −log(a/b) = log(b/a), we arrive at the final form.
The Henderson-Hasselbalch equation reveals an important quantitative insight about buffer capacity — the amount of strong acid or base a buffer can absorb before its pH changes significantly. A buffer is most effective when [A⁻] ≈ [HA], which corresponds to pH ≈ pKa. The conventional rule of thumb is that a buffer maintains adequate capacity within pH = pKₐ ± 1, which corresponds to a [A⁻]/[HA] ratio between 0.1 and 10.
| log([A⁻]/[HA]) | [A⁻]/[HA] Ratio | pH Relative to pKₐ |
|---|---|---|
| −1 | 0.10 (10× more acid) | pKₐ − 1 |
| 0 | 1.0 (equal) | pKₐ |
| +1 | 10 (10× more base) | pKₐ + 1 |
| Strengths | Limitations |
|---|---|
| Converts quadratic equilibrium problems into simple arithmetic with a single log calculation. | Assumes the degree of dissociation is negligible — fails for very dilute buffers (< 0.01 M) or moderately strong acids. |
| Works for any conjugate acid–base pair: acidic buffers (HA/A⁻) or basic buffers (BH⁺/B) with appropriate pK. | Does not account for activity coefficients in concentrated or ionic solutions; uses concentrations rather than activities. |
| Rapidly predicts how pH shifts when strong acid or base is added to a buffer by adjusting the mole ratio. | Cannot describe the pH of strong acid or strong base solutions, or solutions at the equivalence point of a titration. |
| The mole ratio [A⁻]/[HA] can be replaced with a ratio of moles (n_A⁻ / n_HA) since volume cancels — useful for titration problems. | Breaks down outside the pKₐ ± 1 range where one component is overwhelmed and no longer effectively buffers. |
The Henderson-Hasselbalch equation has powerful applications beyond simple buffer pH calculations. During a weak acid–strong base titration, it allows you to calculate the pH at any point in the buffer region — that is, after some (but not all) of the weak acid has been neutralized. At the half-equivalence point, exactly half the weak acid has been converted to conjugate base, so [A⁻] = [HA], log(1) = 0, and pH = pKa. This is one of the most tested relationships on the AP Chemistry exam.
| Concept | Henderson-Hasselbalch Level | Advanced / General Chemistry II |
|---|---|---|
| Buffer pH | pH = pKₐ + log([A⁻]/[HA]) using initial concentrations | Full ICE calculation with exact quadratic or cubic; activity coefficients via Debye-Hückel |
| Polyprotic acids | Apply equation separately to each dissociation step using corresponding pKₐ | Simultaneous equilibria with alpha fraction (α) diagrams for each species |
| Biological systems | Estimate pH of blood buffer (H₂CO₃/HCO₃⁻, pKₐ ≈ 6.35) | Open-system CO₂ equilibria; Henderson-Hasselbalch modified for gas-phase CO₂ partial pressure |
In biochemistry, the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation is applied to amino acid side chains to predict their protonation state at physiological pH. For example, the side chain of histidine has a pKa ≈ 6.0, which means it is roughly 50% protonated at pH 6.0 and predominantly deprotonated at pH 7.4. This sensitivity near physiological pH makes histidine a critical residue in enzyme active sites.