🔬 Titration Sim Level 4 · HL

Stepped pH Curve ● Ready
Vol NaOH
0.0 cm³
pH
Equiv. Pts
Points
0

Polyprotic Acid Titrations

  • Polyprotic acids donate more than one proton, producing multiple equivalence points
  • H₃PO₄ has 3 dissociation steps: Ka₁ >> Ka₂ >> Ka₃ (each ~10⁵× weaker)
  • Each step has its own equivalence point and buffer region
  • At the half-equivalence point, pH = pKₐ for that step
  • The pH curve shows distinct steps — like a staircase

Reading the Staircase

  • Buffer region: flat zones where pH resists change (weak acid + conjugate base)
  • Half-equivalence: midpoint of each buffer region → pH = pKₐ
  • Equivalence point: steep rise at each step → all protons neutralized for that stage
  • H₃PO₄: 3 equiv. points at volumes V, 2V, 3V (if NaOH:acid = 1:1 concentration)
  • Third equivalence of H₃PO₄ is often too gradual to detect (Ka₃ = 4.2 × 10⁻¹³)

IB HL Exam Tips

  • Key skill: identify number of exchangeable protons from the pH curve shape
  • Calculating Ka: at half-equivalence, [HA] = [A⁻], so Ka = [H⁺] and pKₐ = pH
  • Volume ratios: equiv points are equally spaced if same mole ratio (V, 2V, 3V…)
  • Common mistake: confusing the number of equiv. points with total protons — some steps may be too close or weak to observe