pH Calculator - Free Online pH, pOH, H+ and OH- Calculator
pH Calculator
Calculate pH, pOH, H⁺ and OH⁻ concentrations instantly. Essential for chemistry labs and water quality analysis.
Calculate pH from [H⁺]
Enter hydrogen ion concentration to find pH
Results:
Step-by-Step Solution:
📊 pH Scale Reference
📐 Key Formulas
pH Calculation
pH = -log[H⁺]
[H⁺] = 10⁻ᵖᴴ
pOH Calculation
pOH = -log[OH⁻]
pH + pOH = 14
Ion Product of Water
Kw = [H⁺][OH⁻] = 1.0 × 10⁻¹⁴ (at 25°C)
🧪 Common pH Values
Substance | pH Range | [H⁺] (M) | Nature |
---|---|---|---|
Battery Acid | 0.5 | 0.3 | Strong Acid |
Lemon Juice | 2.0 | 0.01 | Acid |
Coffee | 5.0 | 10⁻⁵ | Weak Acid |
Pure Water | 7.0 | 10⁻⁷ | Neutral |
Baking Soda | 9.0 | 10⁻⁹ | Weak Base |
Ammonia | 11.5 | 3.2×10⁻¹² | Base |
Drain Cleaner | 13.5 | 3.2×10⁻¹⁴ | Strong Base |
💡 Pro Tips
Temperature Dependence
pH values change with temperature. Standard is 25°C
Significant Figures
pH has as many decimal places as [H⁺] has sig figs
pH Meter Calibration
Always calibrate with buffer solutions (pH 4, 7, 10)
Activity vs Concentration
In concentrated solutions, use activity coefficients
⚠️ Common Mistakes to Avoid
Wrong Logarithm Base
Always use log₁₀, not ln (natural log)
Unit Confusion
[H⁺] must be in mol/L (M) for pH calculation
Negative Concentrations
Concentrations are always positive values
pH Outside 0-14
While possible, typical pH range is 0-14
How to use this calculator
📊 How to Use This Calculator
- Select calculation type using the tabs: pH from [H⁺], [H⁺] from pH, or pOH calculations
- Enter your known value(s) in the appropriate input field
- Select units if applicable (M, mM, μM, nM for concentrations)
- Click Calculate to see results
- View all related values (pH, pOH, [H⁺], [OH⁻]) and the solution on the pH scale
🧪 Understanding pH and Acid-Base Chemistry
pH is a logarithmic scale that measures the acidity or basicity of aqueous solutions. It quantifies the concentration of hydrogen ions (H⁺) in solution.
Key Concepts:
- • pH = -log[H⁺] where [H⁺] is in mol/L
- • pH scale typically ranges from 0 to 14
- • pH < 7: Acidic (more H⁺ than OH⁻)
- • pH = 7: Neutral (equal H⁺ and OH⁻)
- • pH > 7: Basic/Alkaline (more OH⁻ than H⁺)
- • pH + pOH = 14 (at 25°C)
- • [H⁺][OH⁻] = 1.0 × 10⁻¹⁴ (ion product of water)
🎯 When to Use This Calculator
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•
Laboratory Analysis: Calculate pH when preparing buffer solutions, standardizing acids/bases, or analyzing unknown samples
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•
Water Quality Testing: Determine if water samples meet pH requirements for drinking water, pools, or aquariums
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Chemical Reactions: Predict reaction outcomes based on pH, calculate equilibrium concentrations
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Educational Purposes: Solve homework problems, understand acid-base concepts, prepare for exams
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Industrial Processes: Monitor and control pH in manufacturing, food processing, and waste treatment
🔬 pH Measurement Methods
pH Meter (Electronic)
Most accurate (±0.01 pH), requires calibration with buffer solutions
pH Indicator Paper
Quick and simple (±0.5 pH), color changes indicate pH range
Indicator Solutions
Phenolphthalein, methyl orange, bromothymol blue - specific pH ranges
Calculation from [H⁺]
When concentration is known from titration or other analysis
🌍 Practical Applications by Field
Environmental Science
- • Acid rain monitoring (pH < 5.6)
- • Ocean acidification studies
- • Soil pH for agriculture (6.0-7.0)
- • Water treatment processes
Medicine & Biology
- • Blood pH regulation (7.35-7.45)
- • Stomach acid (pH 1.5-3.5)
- • Urine pH testing (4.6-8.0)
- • Cell culture media
Food & Beverage
- • Wine making (pH 3.0-4.0)
- • Beer brewing (pH 5.2-5.6)
- • Cheese production
- • Food preservation
Industry
- • Metal plating baths
- • Textile dyeing
- • Paper manufacturing
- • Cosmetics formulation
About this calculator
Calculate pH from H+ concentration or vice versa. Also compute pOH and OH- values instantly. Essential tool for chemistry students and labs.
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Frequently Asked Questions
To calculate pH from [H⁺] concentration:
- Select the "pH from [H⁺]" tab at the top of the calculator.
- Enter your hydrogen ion concentration value in the input field.
- Choose the appropriate unit (M, mM, μM, or nM) from the dropdown menu.
- Click "Calculate pH" to see your results.
The calculator will display:
- pH value
- pOH value
- Both [H⁺] and [OH⁻] concentrations
- A visual pH scale showing where your solution falls
Example: If [H⁺] = 0.001 M, the pH = 3.0 (acidic solution).
The calculator accepts hydrogen ion concentrations in four units:
- M (molar/mol/L) - The standard unit for molarity
- mM (millimolar) - Equal to 0.001 M
- μM (micromolar) - Equal to 0.000001 M
- nM (nanomolar) - Equal to 0.000000001 M
Important: Always select the unit that matches your measurement. The calculator automatically converts to molar (M) for pH calculation.
Common examples:
- Strong acids often have [H⁺] in the M range
- Biological systems typically use μM-nM range
- Neutral water has [H⁺] = 1×10⁻⁷ M
The pH calculator uses these fundamental formulas:
- pH = -log₁₀[H⁺] - To calculate pH from hydrogen ion concentration
- [H⁺] = 10⁻ᵖᴴ - To find concentration from pH
- pH + pOH = 14 - The relationship at 25°C
- Kw = [H⁺][OH⁻] = 1.0 × 10⁻¹⁴ - Ion product of water
Note: The calculator uses base-10 logarithm (log), not natural log (ln). All calculations assume standard temperature (25°C) and ideal solution behavior.
The calculator provides pH values to 2 decimal places and concentrations to 4 significant figures, which matches or exceeds typical laboratory precision.
Accuracy considerations:
- Standard pH meters measure to ±0.01 pH units
- The calculations assume ideal solutions - very concentrated solutions may deviate
- Temperature affects pH values (standard is 25°C)
- For pH < 0 or > 14, special considerations apply
- Activity coefficients matter in high ionic strength solutions
For most educational and laboratory purposes, this calculator's precision is more than adequate.
Use this calculator when:
- You know the exact [H⁺] concentration from titration or calculation
- Solving homework problems
- Planning buffer preparations
- Understanding pH relationships
Use a pH meter when:
- Measuring unknown solutions
- Monitoring reactions in real-time
- Quality control testing
- Working with complex mixtures
The calculator is ideal for theoretical work and known concentrations, while pH meters are essential for empirical measurements. Many chemists use both: meters for measurement, calculators for preparation and verification.
Common pH ranges include:
Strong acids (pH 0-2):
- Battery acid: pH 0.5
- Stomach acid: pH 1.5-2.0
Weak acids (pH 2-6):
- Lemon juice: pH 2.0
- Vinegar: pH 2.5
- Coffee: pH 5.0
Neutral (pH 6.5-7.5):
- Pure water: pH 7.0
- Blood: pH 7.35-7.45
Weak bases (pH 7.5-11):
- Baking soda: pH 9.0
- Ammonia solution: pH 11.0
Strong bases (pH 11-14):
- Household bleach: pH 12.5
- Drain cleaner: pH 13-14
Most biological systems maintain pH between 6.5-8.0. Industrial processes may use the full pH range.
Temperature significantly affects pH in several ways:
1. Ion product of water (Kw) changes:
- At 0°C: Kw = 0.114 × 10⁻¹⁴
- At 25°C: Kw = 1.0 × 10⁻¹⁴ (standard)
- At 100°C: Kw = 51.3 × 10⁻¹⁴
2. Neutral pH shifts:
- At 0°C: neutral pH = 7.47
- At 25°C: neutral pH = 7.00
- At 100°C: neutral pH = 6.14
3. Other effects:
- Solution volume changes affect concentration
- Equilibria shift for weak acids/bases
Important: This calculator uses 25°C as standard. For precise work at other temperatures, apply temperature corrections to both calculations and meter calibrations.
Yes, pH can exceed the 0-14 range in extreme conditions.
pH < 0:
- Occurs when [H⁺] > 1 M
- Example: 12 M HCl has pH ≈ -1.08
pH > 14:
- Occurs when [OH⁻] > 1 M
- Example: Concentrated NaOH solutions
However, at high concentrations:
- Activity coefficients deviate significantly from 1
- Water activity decreases
- Simple pH calculations become less accurate
- Use activity-based calculations instead
Most practical applications stay within the 0-14 range.
pH measures acidity via hydrogen ion concentration:
- pH = -log[H⁺]
- Lower pH = more acidic
pOH measures basicity via hydroxide ion concentration:
- pOH = -log[OH⁻]
- Lower pOH = more basic
Key relationship: pH + pOH = 14 (at 25°C)
Examples:
At pH 3 (acidic):
- pOH = 11
- [H⁺] = 10⁻³ M
- [OH⁻] = 10⁻¹¹ M
At pH 11 (basic):
- pOH = 3
- [H⁺] = 10⁻¹¹ M
- [OH⁻] = 10⁻³ M
The calculator shows all four values to illustrate these relationships.
Common error causes and solutions:
1. "Invalid concentration"
- Ensure you entered a positive number
- Concentrations cannot be negative or zero
2. "pH out of range"
- Standard pH range is 0-14
- Check your input value
3. Missing values
- All required fields must be filled
4. Wrong decimal format
- Use period (.) not comma (,) for decimals
5. Scientific notation issues
- Enter as decimal (0.000001) or use unit selection (1 μM)
- Avoid formats like 1e-6
If errors persist, refresh the page and verify your input format matches the examples.
Quick conversion tips:
For integer pH values:
[H⁺] = 10⁻ᵖᴴ
Examples:
- pH 3 → [H⁺] = 10⁻³ = 0.001 M
- pH 7 → [H⁺] = 10⁻⁷ M
For [H⁺] as powers of 10:
pH = -log[H⁺] = exponent
Examples:
- [H⁺] = 10⁻⁵ M → pH = 5
- [H⁺] = 10⁻⁹ M → pH = 9
Rule of thumb: Each pH unit represents a 10× change in [H⁺]. Going from pH 3→4 means [H⁺] decreases 10×.
Decimal pH: Use the calculator for non-integer values like pH 3.75 → [H⁺] = 1.78 × 10⁻⁴ M.
The ion product of water, Kw = [H⁺][OH⁻] = 1.0 × 10⁻¹⁴ at 25°C, is fundamental to pH calculations.
Why it matters:
- Defines the relationship between H⁺ and OH⁻ in all aqueous solutions
- Explains why pH + pOH = 14
- Shows water self-ionization: H₂O ⇌ H⁺ + OH⁻
In any aqueous solution:
- If [H⁺] increases, [OH⁻] must decrease to maintain Kw
- At neutral pH: [H⁺] = [OH⁻] = √Kw = 1.0 × 10⁻⁷ M
Temperature dependence: Kw increases with temperature, changing neutral pH.
The pH calculator assists buffer preparation by:
1. Target pH verification
- Calculate exact [H⁺] needed for desired pH
2. Component ratios
- Use with Henderson-Hasselbalch equation
- pH = pKa + log[A⁻]/[HA]
3. pH adjustment
- Calculate how much acid/base to add
4. Dilution effects
- Verify pH after dilution
Example: For pH 7.4 phosphate buffer:
- Calculator shows [H⁺] = 3.98 × 10⁻⁸ M
- Use with pKa = 7.2 to find ratio
- [HPO₄²⁻]/[H₂PO₄⁻] = 1.58
The calculator confirms your buffer will achieve target pH.
Key limitations include:
1. Activity vs concentration
- At high ionic strength, activity coefficients ≠ 1
- pH = -log(aH⁺) not -log[H⁺]
2. Non-ideal behavior
- Concentrated solutions (>0.1 M) deviate from ideal
3. Temperature effects
- Calculations assume 25°C
- Kw changes with temperature
4. Solvent effects
- Non-aqueous or mixed solvents alter relationships
5. Incomplete dissociation
- Strong acids may not fully dissociate at high concentration
6. Junction potentials
- pH meters face additional challenges
For educational purposes and dilute solutions (<0.01 M), these effects are usually negligible.
pH calculations are essential for titrations:
1. Initial pH
- Calculate starting pH from known concentration
2. During titration
- Use moles of acid/base added to find new [H⁺]
3. Equivalence point
- Strong acid-strong base: pH = 7
- Weak acid-strong base: pH > 7
- Strong acid-weak base: pH < 7
4. Buffer region
- Use Henderson-Hasselbalch equation
5. Indicator selection
- Choose indicator with pKa near equivalence pH
Example: Titrating 0.1 M HCl with NaOH
- Initial pH = 1.0
- At half-equivalence pH ≈ 1.5
- At equivalence pH = 7.0
- Past equivalence pH > 7
The calculator helps verify calculations at each stage.