How many mililiters and grams should be taken of each solution (substance) below, so that the pH of a final solution is pH = 6.8 and final concentrations 4mM(protein), 2mM (FeCl3), 1% (sodium acetate), 3mM (HEPES), 0.5mM (ATP) ?
a ml of 10 mM protein solution whose pI= 8.5 , Mr = 1000
b ml of 7mM FeCl3
c ml of 5 % sodium acetate,
d ml of 8 mM HEPES
e micrograms of ATP
It is either/either. Either you have known concentrations of all components - then your pH is given by the solution composition (and it is either 6.8 that you want or it is something else) or you have to find a, b, c d and e such that the pH of the solution is 6.8. You can't have both at the same time, just like you can't have 1M solution of HCl with pH=7.0.
I agree, I did not express myself correctly: these are actually two problems, as you implied: to find the concentrations for a given pH, or to find the pH of a mixture ! One way or another, these two problems have a singualr solution, right ?
In the second case there is no single solution to the question. It would be hard to analyze exactly your solution, but let's try with the other, similar example that will be easier to deal with.
Let's assume we have three reagents - benzoic acid (pKa=4.19), acetic acid (pKa=4.75), sodium hydroxide, and we want to prepare pH=4.0 buffer. We want to know how much (a, b and c) of each substance we need to prepare buffer.
First of all, we can ignore acetic acid and prepare buffer just using benzoic acid.
Second, we can ignore bezoic acid and prepare buffer just using acetic.
Third, we can mix both acids at any ratio we want and neutralize the mixture to pH=4.00.
As we can mix the solution at any ratio, there is infinite number of ways such buffer can be prepared.
I do not agree on this one. The situation is not simillar because in your example you imply chemical reaction (neutralization) whereas my example does not imply any reaction; mixing different salts isn't really a reaction (even if there is a chemical reaction, we don't care about it as long as all the ionic and molecular species present in the solution retain their identity !). Secondly, this example is not about making a buffer, but making a solution and determining its pH. Using purely mathematical logic, since the variables that determine the value of the right side of the equation are determined and the variables that determine the value of the left side of the equation are also determined, then some x (ox x-es) that are obtained by any mathematical operation applied to these variables must also be singular.
The problem is that I'm biologist and that I do not know HOW TO find these unknowns.
So, please HELP :-) !