What does it mean when a substance has a pH greater than 7?

2 Answers
May 31, 2017

Well, at 25^@ "C" and "1 atm", the substance is expected to be basic. In other conditions, you'll have to try it and tell me.


At 25^@ "C" and "1 atm", the autoionization constant of water is:

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

and thus, ["H"^(+)] = ["OH"^(-)] would result in "pH" = 7, since

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

and ["H"^(+)] = sqrt(K_w) = 10^(-7) "M" when ["H"^(+)] = ["OH"^(-)].

When "pH" > 7, it follows that ["H"^(+)] < 10^(-7) "M", i.e. that the solution is basic... at 25^@ "C" and "1 atm". This reflects the fact that there is less "H"^(+) than "OH"^(-) in solution, and "OH"^(-) influences the basicity.

How would you describe a solution with "pH" < 7 at 25^@ "C" and "1 atm"?

May 31, 2017

It is alkali

Explanation:

A substance with a pH less than 7 is acidic, greater than 7 is alkali and equal to 7 is neutral.
As mentioned by Truong-Son N, this is assuming that the substance is at room temperature (25^@ C) and room pressure (1 atmosphere).

pH actually refers to the concentration of H^+ ions in a solution. Each step down the pH scale is an increase of x10 in concentration. This refers to acid strength because H^+ ions are released into solution when an acid is dissolved in water and the stronger the acid, the higher the proportion of acid molecules that are ionised (split into ions - including H^+).

Hope this helped; let me know if I can do anything else:)