Login / Signup

Strong ions and charge-balance.

Troels Ring
Published in: Scandinavian journal of clinical and laboratory investigation (2023)
It has been shown that the ability to predict the pH in any chemically characterized fluid, together with its buffer-capacity and acid content can be based on the requirement of electroneutrality, conservation of mass, and rules of dissociation as provided by physical chemistry. More is not required, and less is not enough. The charge in most biological fluids is dominated by the constant charge on the completely dissociated strong ions but, nonetheless, a persistent narrative in physiology has problematized the notion that these have any role at all in acid-base homeostasis. While skepticism is always to be welcomed, some common arguments against the importance of strong ions are examined and refuted here. We find that the rejection of the importance of strong ions comes with the prize that even very simple systems such as fluids containing nothing else, or solutions of sodium bicarbonate in equilibrium with known tensions of CO 2 become incomprehensible. Importantly, there is nothing fundamentally wrong with the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation but the idea that it is sufficient to understand even simple systems is unfounded. What it lacks for a complete description is a statement of charge-balance including strong ions, total buffer concentrations, and water dissociation.
Keyphrases
  • quantum dots
  • aqueous solution
  • water soluble
  • solar cells
  • physical activity
  • molecular dynamics