A
Anonymous
Guest
A buffer is a mixture of an acid and its base salt. For example, sodium acetate and acetic acid.
The pKa is the pH at which the concentration of free acetate ion is the same as protonated acetate ion. That is the point at which a particular buffer works the best. A buffer, when it is working, tries to restore the solution to the original pH, so if you put a little more acid in, the pH won't move very much.
Ideally you want to use a buffer whose pKa is about the same as the pH you are aiming for. So if you want your pH to be 8, you don't want to use something that has a pKa of 5.
The pKa is the pH at which the concentration of free acetate ion is the same as protonated acetate ion. That is the point at which a particular buffer works the best. A buffer, when it is working, tries to restore the solution to the original pH, so if you put a little more acid in, the pH won't move very much.
Ideally you want to use a buffer whose pKa is about the same as the pH you are aiming for. So if you want your pH to be 8, you don't want to use something that has a pKa of 5.