pH scale

Author
Discussion

Balmoral

Original Poster:

40,943 posts

249 months

Thursday 21st August 2014
quotequote all
No, not this pH, the acid/alkaline one biggrin

I am trying to create an animated gauge that shows pH falling from 8.6 to 5.4, there is a needle to show the fall and there are also coloured blocks on the scale.

I am struggling with the colours. If I Google images pH scale, the colours shown are not consistent, with some showing that the full range as detailed above is all green neutral, whilst others show it as an extreme of purple down to red. And all sorts of other colour options, even all white within the range as detailed above.

What are the definitive colours that I should use to show a fall from 8.6 to 5.4?

Or alternatively, what would you recommend?

I am thinking mainly green through a patch of yellow/amber and then just touching on red.

Thanks in advance,

Warren.

ATG

20,616 posts

273 months

Thursday 21st August 2014
quotequote all
There aren't definitive colours because there are several indicators you can add to a solution to estimate pH. E.g. litmus paper and universal indicator and they go different colours for the same pH. Your best bet would be to mimic UI.

Balmoral

Original Poster:

40,943 posts

249 months

Thursday 21st August 2014
quotequote all
Thanks for the fast response Alastair, problem is, I Google UI and still they're different!

(Sorry, I'm no chemist)

FunkyGibbon

3,786 posts

265 months

Thursday 21st August 2014
quotequote all
I'd recommend you chose whatever colour scheme you prefer (with green as 7, red more acidic, blue more alkaline) as there really is not a standard.
Then just include a scale on that matches your colours to numbers for viewers to refer to.
Hope this helps.
FG
(Chemist)


V8LM

5,174 posts

210 months

Thursday 21st August 2014
quotequote all
There is no standard, but if you wish to be 'scientific' about it then pH in water ranges between 0 and 14, so by taking 0 as the far red of the spectrum and 14 as deep violet:



Steffan

10,362 posts

229 months

Thursday 21st August 2014
quotequote all
V8LM said:
There is no standard, but if you wish to be 'scientific' about it then pH in water ranges between 0 and 14, so by taking 0 as the far red of the spectrum and 14 as deep violet:

I admire the excellent reply. Looks pretty good to me.

Simpo Two

85,563 posts

266 months

Friday 22nd August 2014
quotequote all
It looks black at both ends to me. I think it needs more change around the critical middle portion.

Then again when I was learning about pH we didn't need animated gauges with colours on wink

Balmoral

Original Poster:

40,943 posts

249 months

Friday 22nd August 2014
quotequote all
V8LM said:
There is no standard, but if you wish to be 'scientific' about it then pH in water ranges between 0 and 14, so by taking 0 as the far red of the spectrum and 14 as deep violet:

I think we have a winner!

That's not far off what I was thinking myself, I'm dealing with seawater which is neutral (green) and then becoming slightly acidic as the pH drops (through amber and almost but not quite into red).

Thanks everyone for your help.

V8LM

5,174 posts

210 months

Friday 22nd August 2014
quotequote all
Ah, well the ionic strength affects both pH and measured p[H] To what is your gauge connected? wink