How do you change pOH to pH?

1 Answer
Jun 1, 2016

Remember this:

#\mathbf(color(blue)("pH" + "pOH" = 14))#

I'll tell you how to derive this below.


#"pH"# indirectly tells you the concentration of hydrogen ions (#"H"^(+)#) in solution:

#color(green)("pH" = -log["H"^(+)])#

where #["X"]# is the concentration of #"X"# in #"M"#.

#"pOH"# tells you something similar, but for hydroxide ions instead:

#color(green)("pOH" = -log["OH"^(-)])#

These can be shown to relate if you recall that water slightly ionizes according to the following equilibrium reaction:

#\mathbf("H"_2"O"(l) rightleftharpoons "H"^(+)(aq) + "OH"^(-)(aq))#

For this, we have the equilibrium constant for the autoionization of water

#K_w = ["H"^(+)]["OH"^(-)] = 10^(-14),#

which heavily favors the production of water, since #10^(-14)# is very, very small.

Now, let's try taking the negative (base 10) logarithm of both sides.

#-log(K_w) = -log(["H"^(+)]["OH"^(-)]) = 14#

But #-log(K_w) = "p"K_w = 14#, so what we have, using the additive argument properties of logarithms and our definitions of #"pH"# and #"pOH"# above, is

#\mathbf(color(blue)(14)) = -log(["H"^(+)]["OH"^(-)])#

#= -log["H"^(+)] + (-log["OH"^(-)])#

#= \mathbf(color(blue)("pH" + "pOH"))#

That tells us that:

#color(blue)("pH" = 14 - "pOH")#

#color(blue)("pOH" = 14 - "pH")#