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what is PKA for acid

pKa is one of the most important chemical properties of any acid — including food acids, feed acids, organic acids, and acidifiers used in animal nutrition.

Here is a clear and complete explanation:


What is pKa for an Acid?

pKa is the measure of acid strength.
More precisely:

pKa = the pH at which an acid is 50% dissociated (ionized) and 50% undissociated.

  • Low pKa → Stronger acid (more dissociation)
  • High pKa → Weaker acid (less dissociation)

It comes from the acid dissociation constant (Ka):

pKa = –log(Ka)


🌡️ Why pKa Is Important for Food and Feed Acids

pKa tells us where and how strongly the acid will work in the digestive system.

In feed acidifiers:

  • Only undissociated acids can penetrate bacterial cell walls and kill pathogens.
  • The amount of undissociated acid depends heavily on the pKa.

✔ An acid works best when:

pH of the environment < pKa

This means more of the acid remains undissociated = antimicrobial active form.


🐖 Example: Pig Stomach vs Intestine

Pig stomach pH = 2–4

  • Acids with low pKa (<4) are very active

Examples:

  • Formic acid (pKa 3.75) → very strong in the stomach
  • Lactic acid (pKa 3.86)

Intestine pH = 5.5–7

  • Acids with higher pKa retain more undissociated form → can work deeper in gut

Examples:

  • Butyric acid (pKa 4.8)
  • Propionic acid (pKa 4.87)

📊 Common Organic Acids and Their pKa Values

AcidpKaMeaning
Formic acid3.75Very strong; great antibacterial effect in stomach
Lactic acid3.86Strong acid; active in stomach
Acetic acid4.76Weaker; partly active beyond stomach
Butyric acid4.82Works deeper in gut; gut health effects
Propionic acid4.87Antifungal; deeper gut activity
Citric acid3.13, 4.76, 6.40Multiple pKa values (triprotic acid)
Benzoic acid4.20Excellent antimicrobial acidifier
Fumaric acid3.03Strong; stable in pelleting

🔬 Why pKa Matters in Designing Acidifiers

Effective feed acidifiers use acids with different pKa values to work in different parts of the digestive tract.

✔ Low pKa acids → Kill bacteria in stomach

(formic, fumaric, lactic)

✔ Moderate pKa acids → Work in intestine

(propionic, butyric)

✔ Multiple pKa acids → Provide buffering & functional benefits

(citric)

This is why modern compound acidifiers mix several acids with different pKas.


❗ Important: pKa ≠ pH

  • pH measures acidity of a solution
  • pKa measures acid dissociation strength (a constant property)

Example:
You can have an acid with high pKa (weak) but a low pH solution if concentrated.


⭐ Simple Explanation (Easy to Remember)

pKa tells you how “strong” an acid is — how easily it releases hydrogen ions.
Lower pKa = stronger acid = more active in low pH environments like the stomach.

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