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Ask experts Expert Question: What is the relationship between charge and basicity/acidity..??
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Shankar Reddy (0)

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What is the relationship between charge and basicity/acidity..??
    

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sirisha (30)

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charge means if any atom looses or gains electrons no :of eltrns gained or lost is represented by chage

acidity is fr bases actually we say ACIDITY OF BASE it is the no:of OH^- ions released by a base wnen dissolved in watr

basicity is fr acids it is the no:of H^+ions released by an acid wen dissolved in wtr

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edison (8935)

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Relationship of Charge to pH

pH is the negative log of the hydrogen ion concentration in a solution. Similarly pKA is the negative log of the acid dissociation constant for an amino acid side chain.

 

 

In solution, if pH < pKA, then the protonated form of an amino acid side chain predominates. If pH > pKA, then the deprotonated form of the amino acid side chain predominates. The charge on an acidic side chain can therefore vary between -1 (when pH << pKA) and 0 ( when pH >> pKA). Consider the example of glutamate, with a side chain pKA = 4.4. When the pH = pKA, the concentration of the protonated and deprotonated forms is equal and the charge is -0.5. When pH = 6.4, the glutamate is about 99% deprotonated, leading to a charge of -0.99. When pH = 2.4, the glutamate is about 99% protonated, leading to a charge of -0.01.

The charge on a basic side chain can range between 0 (when pH >> pKA) and +1 (when pH << pKA). The side chain on lysine normally has a pKA value of about 9.0. When pH = pKA, the concentration of the protonated and deprotonated forms is equal and the charge is +0.5. When pH = 11.0, the lysine is about 99% deprotonated, leading to a charge of +0.01. When pH = 7.0, the lysine is about 99% protonated, leading to a charge of +0.99.

The graph below shows the relationship between charge and pH for the side chains of glutamate, an acidic amino acid, and lysine, a basic amino acid, assuming that these amino acids are incorporated in a protein and that they havepKA values of 4.4 for glutamate and 10.0 for lysine.


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deductions are not valid, or the apparent contradiction is not a contradiction. A paradox moves us to reexamine the argument until we find out what is wrong.
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Shankar Reddy (0)

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 i'm a bit confused...!
can plzz explain this clearly..??

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shivansh shrivastava (35)

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Well,H+ and OH- is what ur callin charge. . .n u knw what they mean in acidity n basicity. . .n if u mean lewis acid/base. .thats electr0n accept0r/d0n0r resp.
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Shankar Reddy (0)

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okay..
thanQ

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