Estimate Reagent Mass
Use buffer capacity in mmol per litre for each pH unit. The estimate assumes 25°C for the free-ion correction.
Example Data Table
| Scenario | Volume | pH change | Buffer capacity | Reagent | Estimated mass |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Buffered solution increase | 10 L | 6.50 to 7.00 | 2.00 mmol/L/pH | Sodium hydroxide, 100% | 0.40 g |
| Buffered solution decrease | 25 L | 7.40 to 6.90 | 1.20 mmol/L/pH | Hydrochloric acid, 37% | 1.48 g |
| High-capacity liquid increase | 50 L | 5.80 to 6.20 | 5.00 mmol/L/pH | Calcium hydroxide, 95% | 3.90 g |
Examples are planning illustrations. Actual doses depend on measured buffer capacity, temperature, mixing, and reagent behaviour.
Formula Used
The estimate starts with the requested pH difference. It then converts the required acid or base equivalents into reagent grams.
For a lower target, the free-ion correction uses the change in hydrogen ions. For a higher target, it uses the change in hydroxide ions. Both use the standard 25°C pH relationship.
How to Use This Calculator
- Measure the current pH with a calibrated meter.
- Enter the target pH and total liquid volume.
- Enter a measured or documented buffer capacity.
- Choose the proper reagent action for the requested direction.
- Enter reagent mass data, purity, and equivalents per mole.
- Start with a lower safety factor for sensitive liquids.
- Calculate, add slowly, mix completely, and measure again.
- Download the result when you need a batch record.
Understanding pH Adjustment Mass
Changing pH is not a simple weight conversion. The same reagent can produce different results in different liquids. Water, dissolved salts, acids, bases, and buffer systems all affect resistance to pH change. This calculator estimates a reagent mass from volume, buffering capacity, purity, and chemical strength. It is most useful for planning a small adjustment. It does not replace measured testing. Begin with a conservative dose. Mix completely. Recheck pH before adding more material.
Why Buffer Capacity Matters
Buffer capacity is the key input. It states how many millimoles of acid or base are needed to shift one litre by one pH unit. A liquid with low capacity changes quickly. A buffered liquid changes slowly. Examples include laboratory buffers, nutrient solutions, pools, fermentation media, and process liquids. Capacity often comes from a titration test or a specification sheet. Enter the best available value. Use a trial batch when the exact capacity is unknown.
What the Estimate Includes
The calculator first finds the requested pH difference. A lower target requires an acidic reagent. A higher target requires a basic reagent. It multiplies the absolute pH difference by solution volume and buffer capacity. That gives estimated millimoles of neutralising equivalents. A small free-ion correction is also included. This correction uses the logarithmic pH scale. It matters more when buffer capacity is near zero. The program then applies purity, molecular mass, and equivalents delivered by each mole.
Reading Reagent Information
Chemical equivalents deserve special attention. One mole of sodium hydroxide provides roughly one hydroxide equivalent. One mole of calcium hydroxide can provide two hydroxide equivalents. One mole of sulfuric acid can provide two acidic equivalents under suitable conditions. Reagent labels may state normality, assay percentage, or concentration instead. Convert those details carefully. The mass result represents the commercial material after the purity adjustment. A lower purity requires more product mass.
Use Incremental Dosing
The safety factor lets you create a cautious working estimate. A factor of one hundred percent gives the calculated amount. A lower initial setting can be better for sensitive mixtures. Add the first portion slowly. Stir or circulate the liquid. Allow the system to stabilise. Then measure pH with a calibrated meter. Temperature, electrode condition, dissolved gases, and mixing time can change the observed reading. Repeat small additions rather than using one large correction.
Work Safely and Verify
Always use compatible equipment and proper protection. Strong acids and bases can cause serious burns. Some reactions create heat, fumes, or precipitates. Add concentrated materials to water or process liquid gradually when appropriate. Follow your local laboratory procedures and the reagent safety data sheet. Never combine unknown chemicals. Record the pH, temperature, dose, and final reading. Those records improve future estimates. This tool supports planning, not unattended dosing. Verify every change with reliable measurement.
Use the result as a calculation only. Run a bench-scale test when material value, product quality, environmental discharge, or personnel safety makes accuracy important. Use automatic dosing controls only after qualified testing confirms the response curve.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What does buffer capacity mean?
Buffer capacity describes resistance to pH change. Here it is expressed as millimoles of acid or base needed per litre for each pH unit. A titration measurement usually gives the most useful value.
2. Why is pH change not directly proportional to grams?
pH is logarithmic, and each liquid has different buffering chemistry. The same mass can produce a large change in lightly buffered water but little change in a strong buffer.
3. Which reagent type should I choose?
Choose an acidic reagent to lower pH. Choose a basic reagent to raise pH. The calculator checks that your chosen direction agrees with the requested pH change.
4. Can I use this with liquid reagents?
Yes. Enter the reagent purity by mass and the appropriate molar mass. Convert the calculated grams to volume only when you also know the product density.
5. What purity should I enter?
Use the assay or active ingredient percentage printed on the label or certificate. Enter 100 for a pure reagent. A lower purity increases the commercial product mass.
6. What are equivalents per mole?
They represent reactive acid or base units delivered by one mole. Sodium hydroxide usually supplies one. Calcium hydroxide and sulfuric acid can supply two under suitable conditions.
7. Is zero buffer capacity realistic?
It is an idealised case. Most real liquids have some buffering from dissolved materials or gases. Use zero only when you deliberately want a simple free-ion estimate.
8. Why should I use a safety factor below 100 percent?
A smaller starting dose reduces overshoot risk. This is helpful when capacity is uncertain or mixing is slow. Add incrementally and measure after each portion.
9. Does temperature affect the result?
Yes. Temperature affects equilibrium, electrode readings, and pH relationships. The free-ion correction assumes 25°C. Use direct measurements when temperature differs significantly.
10. Can I use this for a swimming pool?
Only as a planning estimate. Pool alkalinity, sanitizer chemistry, and product instructions matter. Follow local pool guidance and test the water after each small addition.
11. Is this safe for unknown mixtures?
Do not dose unknown mixtures from a calculation alone. Seek qualified guidance before dosing unfamiliar hazardous chemical mixtures.