Rate Constant (k): Rate Laws and Reaction Order
The rate constant k is the proportionality factor in the rate law that relates reaction rate to reactant concentrations. It depends on temperature (Arrhenius) and is determined experimentally—not from stoichiometry. Units of k vary with reaction order: s⁻¹ (first), M⁻¹s⁻¹ (second), M/s (zero).
Why This Chemistry Calculation Matters
Why: Rate constants quantify how fast reactions proceed and enable prediction of concentration vs time. They are essential for reactor design, drug stability, and understanding reaction mechanisms.
How: Determine k from measured rates and concentrations using rate = k[A]^m[B]^n. For first order, use t₁/₂ = ln(2)/k. Plot ln([A]) vs t for linear fit (slope = -k).
- ●Reaction order is experimental—never assume it equals stoichiometric coefficients.
- ●First-order half-life is constant; second-order half-life depends on initial concentration.
- ●k increases exponentially with temperature via the Arrhenius equation.
Kinetics Examples
⚛️ First Order Decay
Radioactive decay - N₂O₅ decomposition
🔬 Second Order Reaction
NO₂ decomposition - second order kinetics
📊 Zero Order Reaction
Enzyme-catalyzed at saturation
⏱️ First Order Half-Life
Calculate half-life from rate constant
⚡ Rate from Concentration
Calculate reaction rate from concentrations
🔀 Mixed Order Reaction
A + B → Products (first order in each)
📈 Concentration vs Time (1st)
First order: [A] = [A]₀e^(-kt)
📉 Concentration vs Time (2nd)
Second order: 1/[A] = 1/[A]₀ + kt
🔍 Determine Reaction Order
Find order from experimental data
🧬 Enzyme Kinetics
Michaelis-Menten (zero order at high [S])
🎯 Pseudo-First Order
Excess B makes it first order in A
☢️ Radioactive Decay
Carbon-14 decay (first order)
Calculate Rate Constants
For educational and informational purposes only. Verify with a qualified professional.
🔬 Chemistry Facts
k has units s⁻¹ for first order, M⁻¹s⁻¹ for second order, M/s for zero order.
— IUPAC
First-order half-life t₁/₂ = 0.693/k is independent of initial concentration.
— Chemical kinetics
Rate law order must be determined experimentally, not from balanced equation.
— IUPAC
k doubles roughly every 10 K for typical Ea values (Arrhenius).
— NIST
What are Rate Constants?
The rate constant (k) is a proportionality constant in the rate law that relates the reaction rate to reactant concentrations. It's fundamental for understanding how fast chemical reactions proceed and predicting reaction behavior over time.
k = rate constant, [A], [B] = concentrations, m, n = reaction orders
Reaction Orders and Rate Laws
| Order | Rate Law | Integrated Form | Half-Life | Units of k |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zero Order | rate = k | [A] = [A]₀ - kt | t₁/₂ = [A]₀/(2k) | M/s |
| First Order | rate = k[A] | [A] = [A]₀e^(-kt) | t₁/₂ = ln(2)/k | s⁻¹ |
| Second Order | rate = k[A]² | 1/[A] = 1/[A]₀ + kt | t₁/₂ = 1/(k[A]₀) | M⁻¹s⁻¹ |
| Mixed Order | rate = k[A][B] | Complex | Depends on [B] | M⁻¹s⁻¹ |
Key Concepts
Rate Constant (k)
Temperature-dependent constant that determines reaction speed. Larger k = faster reaction. Units depend on reaction order.
Reaction Order
Exponent in rate law. Determines how rate depends on concentration. Must be determined experimentally, not from stoichiometry.
Half-Life
Time for half of reactant to be consumed. Constant for first order, concentration-dependent for others. Useful for radioactive decay.
How to Determine Rate Constants
Rate constants are determined experimentally by measuring reaction rates at different concentrations. The method depends on the reaction order and available data.
🔬 Method 1: From Rate Law
Given Rate and Concentrations
rate = k[A]^m[B]^n
k = rate / ([A]^m[B]^n)
Example:
rate = 0.05 M/s
[A] = 0.1 M, m = 1
k = 0.05 / 0.1 = 0.5 s⁻¹
From Initial Rates
Measure rate at t = 0
Use known concentrations
Advantages:
• No integration needed
• Works for any order
• Avoids complications
📊 Method 2: From Integrated Rate Laws
First Order
ln([A]₀/[A]) = kt
Plot ln([A]) vs t
Slope = -k
Straight line = first order
Second Order
1/[A] = 1/[A]₀ + kt
Plot 1/[A] vs t
Slope = k
Straight line = second order
When to Use Rate Constant Calculations
Rate constants are essential for understanding reaction mechanisms, predicting reaction progress, designing reactors, and analyzing kinetic data in chemistry, biochemistry, and chemical engineering.
Radioactive Decay
First-order kinetics for nuclear decay. Calculate half-lives and decay rates.
- Carbon-14 dating
- Medical isotopes
- Nuclear waste
Enzyme Kinetics
Michaelis-Menten kinetics. Zero order at high substrate, first order at low.
- Drug metabolism
- Biocatalysis
- Enzyme assays
Chemical Engineering
Reactor design, process optimization, and reaction time calculations.
- Batch reactors
- Continuous reactors
- Process control
Important Formulas
Rate Law
General form for reaction aA + bB → products
First Order Half-Life
Constant half-life, independent of initial concentration
First Order Integrated Rate Law
Exponential decay of concentration
Second Order Integrated Rate Law
Linear plot of 1/[A] vs time
Practical Examples
Example: First Order Decomposition
Given:
- N₂O₅ → 2NO₂ + ½O₂
- Rate = 2.5 × 10⁻⁵ M/s
- [N₂O₅] = 0.05 M
- First order in N₂O₅
Solution:
rate = k[N₂O₅]
k = rate / [N₂O₅]
k = 2.5×10⁻⁵ / 0.05
k = 5.0 × 10⁻⁴ s⁻¹
Example: Half-Life Calculation
Given:
- First order reaction
- k = 0.0231 s⁻¹
Solution:
t₁/₂ = ln(2) / k
t₁/₂ = 0.693 / 0.0231
t₁/₂ = 30.0 s
Important Considerations
⚠️ Common Mistakes
- • Assuming order = stoichiometric coefficient
- • Using wrong units for rate constant
- • Confusing rate constant with rate
- • Not accounting for temperature effects
- • Ignoring reverse reactions
✓ Best Practices
- • Determine order experimentally
- • Check units match rate law
- • Use initial rates when possible
- • Consider temperature dependence
- • Verify with integrated rate laws
📚 Official Data Sources
⚠️ Disclaimer: This calculator uses IUPAC rate constant conventions and standard kinetics formulas. For precise work, consult IUPAC Gold Book, NIST Kinetics Database, and authoritative physical chemistry textbooks (e.g., Atkins Physical Chemistry).
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