Why is pH = 7 the Neutral Point?
Most recent answer: 10/22/2007
- jacob ottosen (age 17)
lind skole, denmark
pH is a measure of the amount of Hydrogen ions (H+) in a solution. Ions are just atoms that have an electric charge on them, so H+ is a hydrogen atom with charge of 1. Even in pure water ions tend to form due to random processes (producing some H+ and OH- ions). The amount of H+ that is made in pure water is about equal to a pH of 7. That's why 7 is neutral.
For those who want a more complicated answer, pH is defined: pH = -log10[H+], where [H+] is the concentration of H+ , expressed in moles/liter. In pure water near room temperature, the concentration of H+ is about 10-7 moles/liter, which gives a pH of 7.
I hope this answers your question.
math dan (w. mike w)
(published on 10/22/2007)
Follow-Up #1: pH and temperature
- Nimish (age 17)
Mumbai, India
Mike W,
(published on 05/03/2009)
Follow-Up #2: pH scale
- mary (age 18)
jersey city,nj
Mike W.
(published on 09/17/2009)
Follow-Up #3: ion balance at neutral pH
- Alan Bottomley (age 67)
Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
In solutions with other ions (say Na+ or Cl-) there's no such constraint, so the H+ and OH- concentrations no longer equal. Thus NaOH forms a base, with lots of OH-, and HCl forms an acid, with lots of H+.
Mike W.
(published on 05/25/2012)
Follow-Up #4: ions in water at neutral pH
- William (age 18)
Norway
Mike W.
(published on 05/30/2012)
Follow-Up #5: pH of hot and cold water
- Christopher (age 16)
Greer, SC USA
Exactly. Here's a table of the neutral pH values over a range of temperatures, borrowed from the link below. That site also has a nice discussion
T (°C) | pH | |
---|---|---|
0 | 7.47 | |
10 | 7.27 | |
20 | 7.08 | |
25 | 7.00 | |
30 | 6.92 | |
40 | 6.77 | |
50 | 6.63 | |
100 | 6.14 |
Mike W.
(published on 03/16/2016)
Follow-Up #6: acid-base equilibria
- Alina Wang (age 17)
Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania, USA
The key point is that your assumption here is wrong. "...produce a lot of OH-. I'm assuming that this does not change the hydrogen ion concentration." Some of the OH- combines with H+ to make plain H2O. At room temperature in equilibrium [H+][OH-]=10-14 Molar2.
I got a little lost in your second question, but perhaps the first answer will clarify it. For each reaction there's an equlibrium reached, where (approximately) the product of the concentrations of reactants on one side of the reaction equals some constant time the product of the concentrations of reactants on the other side. (In the products each reactant concentration is multiplied in the number of times that the reactant appears in the reaction formula.)
The reactions are maintained in dynamic equilibrium, where both directions of reaction keep happening, but in equilibrium the forward and backward rates are equal.
Mike W.
(published on 03/26/2020)