An acid dissociation constant is a particular example of an
equilibrium constant. The dissociation of a
monoprotic acid, HA, in dilute solution can be written as : HA A- + H+ The thermodynamic equilibrium constant can be defined by :K^\ominus = \frac{\{\ce{A^-}\} \{\ce{H+}\}}{\ce{\{HA\} }} where \{X\} represents the
activity, at equilibrium, of the chemical species X. K^\ominus is
dimensionless since activity is dimensionless. Activities of the products of dissociation are placed in the numerator, activities of the reactants are placed in the denominator. See
activity coefficient for a derivation of this expression. Since activity is the product of
concentration and
activity coefficient (
γ) the definition could also be written as :K^\ominus = {\frac{[\ce{A^-}] [\ce{H+}]}\ce{[HA] }\Gamma}, \quad \Gamma=\frac{\gamma_\ce{A^-} \ \gamma_\ce{H+}}{\gamma_\ce{HA} \ } where [\text{HA}] represents the concentration of HA and is a quotient of activity coefficients. To avoid the complications involved in using activities, dissociation constants are
determined, where possible, in a medium of high
ionic strength, that is, under conditions in which can be assumed to be always constant. Irrelevant in this context--> Note, however, that all published dissociation constant values refer to the specific ionic medium used in their determination and that different values are obtained with different conditions, as shown for
acetic acid in the illustration above. When published constants refer to an ionic strength other than the one required for a particular application, they may be adjusted by means of
specific ion theory (SIT) and other theories.
Cumulative and stepwise constants A cumulative equilibrium constant, denoted by is related to the product of stepwise constants, denoted by For a dibasic acid the relationship between stepwise and overall constants is as follows :H2A A^2- + 2H+ :\beta_2 = \frac{\ce{[H2A]}}{[\ce{A^2-}][\ce{H+}]^2} :\log \beta_2 = \mathrm{p}K_\ce{a1} + \mathrm{p}K_\ce{a2} Note that in the context of metal-ligand complex formation, the equilibrium constants for the formation of metal complexes are usually defined as
association constants. In that case, the equilibrium constants for ligand protonation are also defined as association constants. The numbering of association constants is the reverse of the numbering of dissociation constants; in this example \log \beta_1 = \mathrm{p}K_\ce{a2}
Association and dissociation constants When discussing the properties of acids it is usual to specify equilibrium constants as acid dissociation constants, denoted by
Ka, with numerical values given the symbol p
Ka. :K_\text{dissoc} = \frac{ \ce{[A- ][H+]}}{\ce{[HA]}}: \mathrm{p}K_\text{a} = -\log K_\text{dissoc} On the other hand, association constants are used for bases. :K_\text{assoc} = \frac{\ce{[HA]}}{\ce{[A- ][H+]}} However,
general purpose computer programs that are used to derive equilibrium constant values from experimental data use association constants for both acids and bases. Because stability constants for a
metal-ligand complex are always specified as association constants, ligand protonation must also be specified as an association reaction. The definitions show that the value of an acid dissociation constant is the reciprocal of the value of the corresponding association constant: : K_\text{dissoc} = \frac{1}{K_\text{assoc}} : \log K_\text{dissoc} = - \log K_\text{assoc} : \mathrm{p}K_\text{dissoc} = - \mathrm{p}K_\text{assoc} Notes • For a given acid or base in water, , the
self-ionization constant of water. • The association constant for the formation of a
supramolecular complex may be denoted as Ka; in such cases "a" stands for "association", not "acid". • For polyprotic acids, the numbering of stepwise association constants is the reverse of the numbering of the dissociation constants. For example, for
phosphoric acid (details in the
polyprotic acids section below): ::\begin{align} \log K_{\text{assoc},1} &= \mathrm{p}K_{\text{dissoc},3} \\ \log K_{\text{assoc},2} &= \mathrm{p}K_{\text{dissoc},2} \\ \log K_{\text{assoc},3} &= \mathrm{p}K_{\text{dissoc},1} \end{align}
Temperature dependence All equilibrium constants vary with
temperature according to the
van 't Hoff equation : \frac{\mathrm{d} \ln\left(K\right)}{\mathrm{d}T} = \frac{\Delta H^\ominus}{RT^2} is the
gas constant and is the
absolute temperature. Thus, for
exothermic reactions, the standard
enthalpy change, , is negative and
K decreases with temperature. For
endothermic reactions, is positive and
K increases with temperature. The standard enthalpy change for a reaction is itself a function of temperature, according to
Kirchhoff's law of thermochemistry: :\left(\frac{\partial\Delta H}{\partial T}\right)_p = \Delta C_p where is the
heat capacity change at constant pressure. In practice may be taken to be constant over a small temperature range.
Dimensionality In the equation :K_\mathrm{a} = \mathrm{\frac{[A^-] [H^+]}{[HA]}},
Ka appears to have
dimensions of concentration. However, since \Delta G = -RT\ln K, the equilibrium constant, ,
cannot have a physical dimension. This apparent paradox can be resolved in various ways. • Assume that the quotient of activity coefficients has a numerical value of 1, so that has the same numerical value as the thermodynamic equilibrium constant K^\ominus. • Express each concentration value as the ratio c/c0, where c0 is the concentration in a [hypothetical] standard state, with a numerical value of 1, by definition. • Express the concentrations on the
mole fraction scale. Since mole fraction has no dimension, the quotient of concentrations will, by definition, be a pure number. The first and second options above give identical numerical values for an equilibrium constant. Furthermore, since a concentration is simply proportional to mole fraction and density : c_i = \frac{x_i\rho}{M} and since the molar mass is a constant in dilute solutions, an equilibrium constant value determined using the third option will simply be proportional to the values obtained with the first two. It is common practice in
biochemistry to quote a value with a dimension as, for example, "
Ka = 30 mM" in order to indicate the scale, millimolar (mM) or micromolar (μM) of the
concentration values used for its calculation. == Strong acids and bases ==