Preparing the right buffer at the correct pH and concentration is one of the most fundamental tasks in any life science, chemistry or pharmaceutical laboratory. Errors in buffer preparation can compromise enzyme activity, protein stability, cell viability and assay reproducibility. According to a review published by the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI), incorrect buffer composition is one of the most common root causes of irreproducible results in biochemical assays. Yet calculating the exact reagent masses from scratch is time-consuming and prone to arithmetic mistakes.
This free buffer preparation calculator generates an exact, lab-ready recipe in seconds. Select your buffer system, enter your target pH, concentration and volume, and get precise reagent masses alongside step-by-step preparation instructions. Covers PBS, Tris-HCl, sodium phosphate, sodium acetate, HEPES, MOPS, carbonate and McIlvaine citrate-phosphate buffers.
This page covers
- → A fully working buffer preparation calculator (PBS, Tris, phosphate, acetate, HEPES, MOPS and more)
- → What a buffer solution is and the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation explained
- → Properties and uses of each major buffer system
- → How to choose the right buffer and best practice preparation tips
What Is a Buffer Solution?
A buffer solution is a mixture of a weak acid and its conjugate base, or a weak base and its conjugate acid, that resists changes in pH when small amounts of acid or base are added. According to Wikipedia's chemistry reference on buffer solutions, they work by neutralising added acid or base through chemical equilibrium, maintaining pH within a narrow, predictable range.
Buffer solutions are essential across biology, chemistry and pharmaceutical research. Enzyme activity, protein stability, cell viability and reaction kinetics all depend critically on maintaining the correct pH. Even a shift of 0.2 pH units can denature proteins, inhibit enzymes or compromise experimental results. Research published in ScienceDirect's biochemistry reference on buffer solutions highlights that buffer selection and preparation quality are foundational to reproducible biochemical and cell biology workflows.
The Henderson-Hasselbalch Equation
pH = pKa + log([A] / [HA])
[A] is the conjugate base concentration | [HA] is the weak acid concentration
This calculator applies the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation with literature pKa values and temperature corrections (dpKa/dT) for each buffer system, generating precise reagent masses for your chosen pH, concentration and volume. The McIlvaine citrate-phosphate buffer uses experimentally derived mixing ratios from the original published tables.
How the Calculator Works
Select Your Buffer System
Choose from 8 common laboratory buffer systems. Each has pre-loaded pKa values, molecular weights and temperature correction factors.
Enter Your Parameters
Input your target pH, total buffer concentration in mM, final volume in mL and preparation temperature in degrees C.
Get Your Recipe
The calculator outputs exact reagent masses in grams and mmol, the acid-to-base ratio, and numbered step-by-step preparation instructions you can print or save.
Verify and Adjust
Always verify final pH with a calibrated pH meter and make fine adjustments with dilute HCl or NaOH before bringing to final volume.
Common Buffer Systems in the Lab
Each buffer system has an effective pH range determined by its pKa. Always choose a buffer whose pKa is within 1 pH unit of your target pH for reliable buffering capacity.
How to Choose the Right Buffer
Use this quick reference table to match your application to the most appropriate buffer system.
| Application | Recommended Buffer | pH Range |
|---|---|---|
| Cell washing and culture | PBS or HEPES | 7.2 to 7.6 |
| Protein purification | Tris or Phosphate | 7.0 to 8.5 |
| Gel electrophoresis (DNA or protein) | Tris-based (TAE or TBE) | 8.0 to 8.3 |
| HPLC and chromatography | Phosphate or Acetate | 3.6 to 8.0 |
| Low-pH enzyme assays | Acetate or Citrate | 3.0 to 5.6 |
| Live-cell imaging | HEPES or MOPS | 6.5 to 8.0 |
| RNA gel electrophoresis | MOPS | 6.5 to 7.9 |
| High-pH applications | Carbonate / Bicarbonate | 9.2 to 10.8 |
Buffer Preparation Best Practice
Always use a calibrated pH meter
Calculated recipes are starting points. Variations in reagent purity, water quality and temperature all shift the final pH. Calibrate your pH meter with at least two standard buffers bracketing your target pH before making adjustments. LabFriend stocks the LLG pH Meter 7 and the Mettler-Toledo SevenDirect SD20 for reliable benchtop pH measurement. For pH meter calibration, use NIST-traceable certified pH buffer solutions.
Use high-purity water
Dissolved CO2, ions and organic contaminants in tap or low-grade water will shift your pH and affect buffer performance. Use Type 1 (ultrapure) or at minimum Type 2 deionised water for all buffer preparations. According to ASTM Standard E1964, Type 1 water has a resistivity of at least 18 megohm-cm and is the gold standard for buffer and reagent preparation in analytical laboratories.
Weigh reagents accurately
Accurate reagent masses are critical to achieving the correct buffer concentration. Use a laboratory analytical balance with a readability of at least 0.1 mg for buffer components. LabFriend stocks analytical balances from Kern and Sohn, Sartorius and OHAUS suitable for all buffer preparation workflows.
Prepare and measure at working temperature
pH is temperature-dependent. This is especially critical for Tris buffers which shift by -0.031 pH units per degree C. If your assay runs at 37 degrees C, prepare and check pH at 37 degrees C. For refrigerated buffers, allow equilibration to working temperature before use.
Adjust pH before bringing to final volume
Dissolve all reagents, bring to approximately 90% of final volume, then adjust pH with dilute HCl or NaOH dropwise. Only then bring to final volume using a Class A volumetric flask. Adjusting pH after reaching final volume introduces significant volume errors.
Filter and store correctly
Filter buffers through a 0.2 um membrane for biological applications. Store at 4 degrees C and label clearly with buffer type, pH, concentration, preparation date and expiry. Most aqueous buffers are stable for 1 to 3 months at 4 degrees C. Sterile-filtered buffers last 3 to 6 months.
Equipment for Buffer Preparation at LabFriend
Every buffer preparation workflow requires accurate weighing, precise volumetric measurement and reliable pH verification. Browse the key equipment categories and trusted brands at LabFriend.
Buffer Reagents Available at LabFriend
LabFriend stocks the high-purity reagents needed to prepare all common laboratory buffer systems, from research-grade salts to ready-made buffer concentrates.
PBS Ingredients
- •Sodium Chloride (NaCl)
- •Potassium Chloride (KCl)
- •Disodium Hydrogen Phosphate (Na2HPO4)
- •Potassium Dihydrogen Phosphate (KH2PO4)
Tris Buffer Ingredients
- •Tris Base (MW 121.14 g/mol)
- •Tris-HCl (MW 157.60 g/mol)
- •Hydrochloric Acid (for pH adjustment)
Phosphate Buffer Ingredients
- •Sodium Phosphate Monobasic (NaH2PO4)
- •Sodium Phosphate Dibasic (Na2HPO4)
HEPES and Good's Buffers
- •HEPES free acid (MW 238.30 g/mol)
- •HEPES sodium salt (MW 260.29 g/mol)
- •MOPS free acid (MW 209.26 g/mol)
Related lab guides and tools:
Frequently Asked Questions
What is buffer capacity and why does it matter?
Buffer capacity is the amount of acid or base a buffer can absorb before its pH changes significantly. It is highest when pH equals the pKa of the buffer and decreases outside a range of pKa plus or minus 1. A buffer with insufficient capacity will fail during the experiment as metabolic acids or CO2 drive the pH out of range. Typical biological buffers are prepared at 10 to 100 mM concentration, which provides adequate capacity for most assays. According to Wikipedia's reference on buffering agents, buffer capacity is formally defined by the Van Slyke equation and is a critical design parameter for any biochemical assay system.
Why does my Tris buffer pH change when I put it on ice?
Tris is one of the most temperature-sensitive laboratory buffers. Its pKa changes by approximately -0.031 pH units per degree C. A buffer prepared at pH 7.5 at 25 degrees C will measure around pH 8.1 at 4 degrees C. This is a significant shift that can affect enzyme activity and protein behaviour. Prepare Tris buffers at the temperature you intend to use them, or switch to HEPES for cold-room work. See the Thermo Fisher buffer preparation reference for temperature correction guidance.
Can I autoclave my buffer to sterilise it?
Most inorganic salt-based buffers such as PBS and sodium phosphate can be autoclaved without significant pH change. Tris buffers can drift noticeably during autoclaving and should be re-checked and adjusted after cooling. HEPES and other Good's buffers are generally not recommended for autoclaving as they can degrade. For these, sterile filtration through a 0.2 um membrane is the preferred sterilisation method.
What concentration should I prepare my buffer at?
For most biological applications, 10 to 50 mM is the standard working concentration. PBS is prepared at 10 mM phosphate. Higher concentrations of 100 to 500 mM are used as stock solutions diluted before use using the C1V1 = C2V2 dilution calculator. Very high concentrations can increase ionic strength in ways that affect enzyme kinetics and protein interactions.
Why should I not use phosphate buffer with divalent cations?
Phosphate ions react with calcium (Ca2+) and magnesium (Mg2+) to form insoluble precipitates such as calcium phosphate and magnesium phosphate. This removes the divalent cations from solution and can block pipettes, clog filters and ruin assays. If your protocol requires calcium or magnesium, use HEPES, MOPS or Tris instead, or use a calcium and magnesium-free PBS formulation and add the cations separately.
How accurate is this buffer calculator?
The calculator uses the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation with literature pKa values and a linear temperature correction based on experimentally reported dpKa/dT values for each buffer system. It provides a highly accurate starting point. In practice, final pH will vary slightly due to reagent purity, water quality, ionic strength effects and instrument calibration. Always verify and fine-adjust your buffer pH with a calibrated pH meter before use.
How long can I store a prepared buffer?
Most aqueous buffer solutions stored at 4 degrees C in a sealed container remain stable for 1 to 3 months. Sterile-filtered buffers stored at 4 degrees C typically last 3 to 6 months. Always label buffers with preparation date, pH, concentration and any additives. Discard if you observe precipitation, cloudiness, colour change or pH drift beyond 0.1 units from the original value.
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