Definition and Overview
What is a Buffer Solution?
Buffer solution: aqueous system resisting pH change upon addition of small amounts of acid or base. Maintains near-constant hydrogen ion concentration. Essential in chemical, biological, and industrial processes.
Equilibrium Basis
Consists of weak acid/base conjugate pair in equilibrium. Reaction: HA ⇌ H+ + A−. Equilibrium shifts to neutralize added H+ or OH−.
Importance in Chemistry
Controls reaction environments, enzyme activity, and analytical determinations. Prevents drastic pH fluctuations that can alter chemical species or biological function.
"Buffers are the guardians of pH, ensuring chemical constancy in dynamic environments." -- Peter Atkins
Components of Buffer Solutions
Weak Acid
Partially dissociated acid with equilibrium constant Ka. Supplies H+ ions to neutralize bases.
Conjugate Base
Base formed by deprotonation of weak acid. Accepts H+, neutralizes added acid.
Salt Forms
Often buffer includes salt of conjugate base for sufficient ion concentration and equilibrium balance.
Solvent
Typically water. Medium for acid-base equilibrium and ion exchange.
Mechanism of Buffer Action
Neutralization of Added Acid
Added H+ reacts with conjugate base (A−): A− + H+ → HA. Minimizes free H+ increase.
Neutralization of Added Base
Added OH− reacts with weak acid: HA + OH− → A− + H2O. Prevents pH rise.
Dynamic Equilibrium
Equilibrium shifts to restore balance after perturbation. Le Chatelier’s principle governs response.
pH Stability
Buffer minimizes free H+ concentration change, stabilizing pH.
Types of Buffer Solutions
Acidic Buffers
Composed of weak acid and its salt. Effective below pH 7. Example: acetic acid/acetate buffer.
Basic Buffers
Consist of weak base and its salt. Effective above pH 7. Example: ammonia/ammonium chloride buffer.
Phosphate Buffers
Common biological buffers with multiple ionization states (H3PO4, H2PO4−, HPO42−). Broad pH range.
Good’s Buffers
Organic buffers with minimal interference, stable pKa, biocompatible. Examples: HEPES, MES.
Henderson-Hasselbalch Equation
Formula
Relates pH, pKa, and ratio of conjugate base to acid concentrations.
pH = pKa + log([A−] / [HA])Interpretation
pH depends on acid dissociation constant and relative concentration of buffer components.
Application
Used to calculate required component ratios to achieve target pH.
Limitations
Assumes ideal behavior, constant ionic strength, and negligible activity coefficients.
Buffer Capacity and Range
Definition
Amount of acid/base added before pH changes by one unit. Indicates buffer strength.
Factors Affecting Capacity
Concentration of buffer components: higher molarity, higher capacity. Ratio of acid/base also critical.
Buffer Range
Effective pH range: pKa ±1 unit. Outside range, buffer action weakens.
Quantitative Expression
Buffer capacity, β = dC / d(pH), where dC is moles of strong acid/base added per liter.
| Parameter | Description |
|---|---|
| Buffer Capacity (β) | Resistance to pH change per mole of acid/base added |
| Buffer Range | pH interval where buffer is effective (pKa ±1) |
Preparation of Buffer Solutions
Choosing Components
Select weak acid/base with pKa near desired pH. Balance solubility, stability, and non-reactivity.
Mixing Ratios
Calculate acid and conjugate base amounts using Henderson-Hasselbalch equation. Adjust concentration for capacity.
pH Adjustment
Fine-tune pH by incremental addition of strong acid/base post-mixing.
Storage and Stability
Store at controlled temperature, exclude CO2 to prevent drift. Use inert containers.
Example:Desired pH = 7.4pKa (acid) = 7.2Calculate [A−]/[HA] ratio:7.4 = 7.2 + log([A−]/[HA])log([A−]/[HA]) = 0.2[A−]/[HA] = 1.58Mix acid and salt accordingly.Applications of Buffer Solutions
Biological Systems
Maintain physiological pH in blood and cells. Essential in enzyme function and metabolic pathways.
Chemical Analysis
Control pH in titrations, chromatography, and spectrophotometry to ensure reproducibility.
Industrial Processes
Used in fermentation, dyeing, pharmaceutical formulation to stabilize reaction conditions.
Environmental Chemistry
Buffer natural waters to prevent acidification or alkalinization from pollutants.
Limitations and Considerations
pH Range Restriction
Effective only near pKa. Outside this, buffer action is negligible.
Concentration Constraints
High concentrations increase ionic strength affecting reaction rates and solubility.
Temperature Dependence
Buffer pKa and capacity vary with temperature, altering pH stability.
Interferences
Buffer components may react with analytes or enzymes, causing side effects.
Experimental Determination
pH Titration
Measure pH change upon incremental addition of strong acid/base. Plot titration curve to confirm buffer region.
Buffer Capacity Measurement
Calculate moles acid/base required to shift pH by 1 unit; plot capacity vs pH.
Electrode Calibration
Use standard buffer solutions to calibrate pH electrodes for accuracy.
Data Analysis
Fit experimental pH data to Henderson-Hasselbalch model to determine pKa and component concentrations.
| Method | Purpose | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Titration Curve | Identify buffer region | pH vs volume plot |
| Capacity Calculation | Quantify buffer strength | Buffer capacity value |
| Electrode Calibration | Ensure pH accuracy | Reliable pH measurement |
Common Examples
Acetic Acid / Sodium Acetate
pKa = 4.76. Used in biochemical assays, food industry. Effective pH 3.7–5.7.
Ammonia / Ammonium Chloride
pKa = 9.25 (ammonium ion). Used in wastewater treatment, chemical synthesis.
Phosphate Buffer
pKa = 7.2 (H2PO4−/HPO42−). Universal biological buffer, physiological pH maintenance.
Citrate Buffer
pKa = 3.1, 4.7, 6.4. Used in pharmaceuticals, blood collection tubes.
Buffer system example:HA = CH3COOH (acetic acid)A− = CH3COO− (acetate ion)Equilibrium: CH3COOH ⇌ H+ + CH3COO−pKa = 4.76References
- Atkins, P., de Paula, J. Physical Chemistry, 10th Edition, Oxford University Press, 2014, pp. 765–780.
- Stumm, W., Morgan, J.J. Aquatic Chemistry: Chemical Equilibria and Rates in Natural Waters, 3rd Edition, Wiley, 1996, pp. 150–175.
- Ferguson, J. The Henderson-Hasselbalch Equation and its Application. Journal of Chemical Education, vol. 85, 2008, pp. 1372–1377.
- Good, N.E., et al. Hydrogen Ion Buffers for Biological Research. Biochemistry, vol. 5, 1966, pp. 467–477.
- Sigel, H., Martin, R.B. Equilibria in Biological Systems, 3rd Edition, CRC Press, 1995, pp. 230–255.