Effect of Salts on pH

Salts will affect the pH of a solution. Some salts will yield neutral solutions, others will yield acidic solutions, and still other salts will yield basic solutions. Below are several rules you will need to know.

Salts that Yield Neutral Solutions

A salt that contains the anion of a strong acid and the cation of a strong base will yield a neutral solution. For example, NaNO3, will dissociated into the Na+ and the NO3 ion. The sodium ion is the cation of a strong base, NaOH, and the nitrate ion is the cation of a strong acid, HNO3. When NaNO3 is dissolved, the solution will be neutral because neither Na+ or NO3 will react with H2O to any great extent.

Salts that Yield Acidic Solutions

A salt that contains the anion of a strong acid and the cation of a weak base will yield an acidic solution. One example is NH4Cl. The NH4+ ion is the cation of a weak base, NH3, and Cl is the cation of a strong acid, HCl. The Cl will not react with water to any great extent, but the NH4+ will react with water to produce H3O+ ion. The solution will be acidic.

NH4+ (aq) + H2O (l) ⇄ NH3 (aq) + H3O+ (aq)

Salts that Yield Basic Solutions

A salt that contains the anion of a weak acid and the cation of a strong base will yield a basic solution. One example, NaCH3COO, will dissociate into sodium ions and acetate ions. The sodium ion is the cation of a strong base and does not react with water, but acetate ion, CH3COO, is the anion of a weak acid and reacts with water to produce hydroxide ion, OH ion.

CH3COO (aq) + H2O (l) ⇄ CH3COOH (aq) + OH (aq)

Salts of Weak Acidic Cations and Weakly Basic Anions

If a salt contains the anion of a weak acid and the cation of a weak base, the pH of the solution will depend on the relative acid strength of base strength of the ions. For example, NH4CN dissociates into NH4+ ion which is the cation of a weak base, and CN which is the anion of a weak acid. Both will react with water:

NH4+ (aq) + H2O (l) ⇄ NH3 (aq) + H3O+ (aq)   Ka = 5.7 x 10-10

CN (aq) + H2O (l) ⇄ HCN (aq) + OH (aq)   Kb = 1.6 x 10-5

In this case we look at Ka and Kb. The value of Kb is larger, therefore, the solution is basic. For a solution the larger K, either Ka or Ka, will determine if the solution is acidic or basic.

Exercises

Exercise 1. For the following salts, if they are dissolved in water, indicate if the solution is acidic, basic, or neutral.

a) Na2CO3
b) KHSO4
c) CH3NH3F
d) CsBr
e) RbNO2

Check Solution to Exercise 1

Exercise 2. What is the pH of a solution that is 2.5 M NaCN? Ka (HCN) = 4.9 x 10-10

Check Solution to Exercise 2

Exercise 3. Calculate the pH of a solution that is 0.5 M Ca(ClO4)2.

Check Solution to Exercise 3

Exercise 4. What is the pH of an aqueous solution that contains 0.35 M NH4NO3?

Check Solution to Exercise 4

Exercise 5. Calculate the pH of a solution that is 0.15 M NaHSO4.

Check Solution to Exercise 5

Back to Acids and Bases: Aqueous Equilibria
Back to Study Guides for General Chemistry 2

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