Abstract

Three thermodynamically meaningful pKa values can be defined for polyprotic acids: macroscopic, microscopic, and quasisite pKa values. In this paper, the relation between these pKa values and their relation to titration curves is discussed. Often inflection points of total and individual titration curves or the pH value where the proton binding site is half protonated, so-called pK1/2 values, are used to identify the pKa values of polyprotic acids or of a proton binding site within the polyprotic acids. However, both are generally not identical with the pKa values of a polyprotic acid. The different thermodynamic definitions of pKa values are compared to commonly used ways of obtaining pKa values from titration curves. The inflection points and pK1/2 values are a first good guess for further fitting. However, only fitting titration curves to proper thermodynamic expressions lead to the respective pKa values that are associated with the reaction free energy. A polyprotic acid with N titratable groups has ...

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