Why is aspirin considered to be a weak acid and how can you measure the exact pH?

1 Answer
Aug 14, 2017

Because its first #"pK"_a# is known to be about #3.5#, which is on the order of a weak acid. The #"pK"_a# of acetic acid is #4.75#, so aspirin is #10^(4.75-3.5) = 17.78# times stronger than acetic acid.

Nonetheless, an acid with a #"pK"_a# below #0# (i.e. #K_a > 1#) is generally considered a so-called "strong acid".


And its #"pH"# can easily be measured by experiment...

Stick a #"pH"# probe into a given solution of aspirin dissolved as a given concentration, and knowing that #K_(a1) = 10^(-4.75) = 1.78 xx 10^(-5)#, which is small, the small #x# approximation can be used to predict the #"pH"# before trying the experiment.

#"HAsp"(aq) + "H"_2"O"(l) rightleftharpoons "Asp"^(-)(aq) + "H"_3"O"^(+)(aq)#

#K_(a1) = 1.78 xx 10^(-5) = x^2/(["HAsp"] - x) ~~ x^2/(["HAsp"])#

And thus, having a given concentration for aspirin, we obtain

#x = ["H"^(+)] = sqrt(K_(a1)["HAsp"]#

And so, the #"pH"# would be...

#color(blue)("pH" ~~ -log(sqrt(K_(a1)["HAsp"]))#

as one could verify by experiment.