Tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane [(HOCH2)3CNH2, commonly known as "Tris"] is very widely used as a buffer in biochemical and molecular biological work. The pKa of
Tris is 8.1. A buffer was prepared by dissolving 100 mmols of Tris in about 900 ml of water,
adjusting the pH to 8.5 by addition of HCl (using a pH meter to monitor pH) and finally
adjusting the final volume to 1 liter. This is called a Tris-HCl buffer.
a) Is Tris an acid or a base?
b) How should the buffer solution be labelled?
c) What is the ratio of [Tris]/[Tris- H+] in the solution?
d) Assuming the pH meter was properly calibrated, what fraction of the Tris is protonated (i.e.
in the Tris-H+ form)?
e) What is the concentration of Cl- in the solution?