Haha, Ben posted as I was writing this, so there may be some overlap
When an acid is fully reacted with a base, the pH of the solution is determined by the salt created in the reaction.
The salts of strong acids and strong bases are neutral, meaning they don't affect the pH, and so a solution of that salt should have pH=7. For example, HCl + NaOH
H
2O + Na
+ + Cl
-, and as NaCl is the salt of a strong acid-strong base reaction, it has no effect on the pH and the pH=7.
The salt of a weak acid-strong base reaction is basic because the acid anion turns into a conjugate base in the salt. For example, H
3PO
4 + NaOH
H
2O + Na
+ + H
2PO
4-. The H
2PO
4- is basic, and so the pH of the solution > 7. You can calculate the pH exactly if you know the concentrations and the K
b of the conjugate base.
The same is true of a strong acid-weak base reaction, except you'll have to use the K
a of the conjugate acid of the weak base. The pH will consequently be less than 7.
Remember that H
2SO
4 has two acidic hydrogens, so the conjugate base at the first equivalence point is HSO
4-. However, as HSO
4- can't turn back into sulfuric acid because sulfuric acid ionizes completely, you should still use the K
a of HSO
4- to calculate the pH.