Solubility Product (Ksp) Explained Simply

5 min read

Solubility product, commonly written as Ksp, is a key concept in IB Chemistry Topic 7 (Equilibrium) and Topic 19 (HL). It describes the equilibrium that exists when an ionic solid dissolves slightly in water. Even substances considered "insoluble" dissolve to a tiny extent, and Ksp quantifies exactly how much. Understanding Ksp helps you predict whether a precipitate will form, calculate solubility, and compare the stability of ionic compounds in solution.

What Is Solubility Product (Ksp)?

Ksp (solubility product constant) is the equilibrium constant for the dissolution of a sparingly soluble ionic solid.

It represents:

  • How much of the solid dissolves
  • The concentration of ions at equilibrium
  • The point at which the solution becomes saturated

Even for nearly insoluble compounds, Ksp has a definite value.

The Dissolution Equilibrium

When a sparingly soluble salt dissolves, an equilibrium forms between the solid and its ions.

Example:
AgCl(s) ⇌ Ag⁺(aq) + Cl⁻(aq)

At equilibrium, the concentrations of Ag⁺ and Cl⁻ remain constant, and the solid no longer dissolves or forms crystals overall.

The Ksp expression is:

Ksp = [Ag⁺][Cl⁻]

The solid does not appear in the expression because its concentration is constant.

Writing Ksp Expressions

For a salt that dissociates as:

aAₓBᵧ(s) ⇌ xAᵧ⁺ + yBₓ⁻

The Ksp expression is:

Ksp = [Aᵧ⁺]ˣ [Bₓ⁻]ʸ

Examples:

1. CaF₂

CaF₂(s) ⇌ Ca²⁺ + 2F⁻
Ksp = [Ca²⁺][F⁻]²

2. PbI₂

PbI₂(s) ⇌ Pb²⁺ + 2I⁻
Ksp = [Pb²⁺][I⁻]²

3. Fe(OH)₃

Fe(OH)₃(s) ⇌ Fe³⁺ + 3OH⁻
Ksp = [Fe³⁺][OH⁻]³

Larger exponents make the Ksp expression highly sensitive to ion concentrations.

What Ksp Tells You

Ksp shows how soluble a substance is:

  • Larger Ksp → more soluble
  • Smaller Ksp → less soluble

However, Ksp values are temperature-dependent.
Increasing temperature usually increases solubility of solids.

Calculating Molar Solubility from Ksp

Molar solubility (s)

The number of moles of solute that dissolve per liter of solution.

For 1:1 salts (AgCl, NaF):

  • Ksp = s²
  • s = √Ksp

For 1:2 or 1:3 salts, use stoichiometry:

Example: CaF₂
[s] = concentration of Ca²⁺
[2s] = concentration of F⁻
Ksp = (s)(2s)² = 4s³
Solve for s.

IB exam questions frequently require these calculations.

Predicting Precipitation Using Ksp

Ksp helps determine whether a precipitate will form when two solutions are mixed.

You use Q, the reaction quotient:

  • If Q < Ksp → no precipitate
  • If Q = Ksp → saturated solution
  • If Q > Ksp → precipitate forms

This is vital in qualitative analysis and selective precipitation techniques.

Example:
Mixing AgNO₃ and NaCl forms a precipitate when:
[Ag⁺][Cl⁻] > Ksp of AgCl

This ability to predict precipitation appears often on IB Paper 2.

Common Uses of Ksp in IB Chemistry

1. Determining solubility

Use Ksp to calculate how much of a salt dissolves.

2. Predicting precipitate formation

Compare Q to Ksp.

3. Removing ions from solution

Industries use precipitation to remove impurities.

4. Selective precipitation

Different Ksp values allow chemists to separate ions selectively.

5. Acid–base influence on solubility

Hydroxides and carbonates become more soluble in acidic conditions because acid removes an ion involved in equilibrium.

Factors Affecting Solubility and Ksp

1. Temperature

Ksp changes with temperature; most solids become more soluble when heated.

2. Common-ion effect

Adding an ion already in the equilibrium reduces solubility.

Example:
Adding NaCl reduces AgCl solubility because Cl⁻ increases.

3. pH

Hydroxide and carbonate salts dissolve more readily in acidic solutions.

Common IB Misunderstandings

“A small Ksp means no ions dissolve.”

Incorrect—small Ksp means few ions dissolve, not zero.

“Ksp and solubility are the same.”

Ksp is a constant; solubility is a numerical amount.

“A large Ksp always means high solubility.”

Generally true, but stoichiometry matters.

“Solids appear in equilibrium expressions.”

Solids never appear in Ksp expressions.

FAQs

Why doesn’t the solid appear in the Ksp expression?

Its concentration is constant and does not change during equilibrium.

Is Ksp affected by concentration changes?

No—only temperature affects Ksp. Concentration affects Q.

Why do some salts dissolve more in acid?

Acid removes one of the ions (like OH⁻ or CO₃²⁻), shifting equilibrium.

Conclusion

The solubility product constant (Ksp) describes the equilibrium between a sparingly soluble ionic solid and its dissolved ions. It allows IB Chemistry students to quantify solubility, predict precipitation, and understand the factors that influence solution equilibria. Mastering Ksp is essential for solving advanced equilibrium questions and performing accurate stoichiometric calculations.

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