Second Order Reaction Rate Constant Calculator
Results:
Understanding Second Order Reactions
In chemical kinetics, the rate of a reaction is how fast reactants are converted into products. For a second-order reaction, the rate of the reaction is proportional to the concentration of two reactants, or the square of the concentration of a single reactant. The rate law for a second-order reaction generally takes one of two forms:
Case 1: Rate = k[A][B] (where A and B are different reactants) The integrated rate law for this case is: $$ \frac{1}{[A]_0 – [B]_0} \ln\left(\frac{[B]_0[A]_t}{[A]_0[B]_t}\right) = kt $$ where:
- k is the rate constant
- [A]₀ is the initial concentration of reactant A
- [B]₀ is the initial concentration of reactant B
- [A]t is the concentration of reactant A at time t
- [B]t is the concentration of reactant B at time t
- t is the time elapsed
Case 2: Rate = k[A]² (where the reaction depends on the square of a single reactant's concentration) The integrated rate law for this case is: $$ \frac{1}{[A]_t} – \frac{1}{[A]_0} = kt $$ where:
- k is the rate constant
- [A]₀ is the initial concentration of reactant A
- [A]t is the concentration of reactant A at time t
- t is the time elapsed
This calculator specifically handles the case where the reaction order is 2 and the initial concentrations are provided to calculate the rate constant (k). The units of k for a second-order reaction are typically M⁻¹s⁻¹ or L mol⁻¹s⁻¹.
How to Use the Calculator:
- Enter the initial concentration of Reactant A in Molarity (M).
- Enter the initial concentration of Reactant B in Molarity (M).
- Enter the concentration of Reactant A at a specific time point 't' in Molarity (M).
- Enter the time 't' in seconds (s) at which the concentration of Reactant A was measured.
- The calculator assumes a second-order reaction (reaction order is set to 2).
- Click "Calculate Rate Constant (k)" to find the value of k.
Example Calculation:
Consider the reaction between two molecules of NO₂ to form N₂O₄: 2NO₂(g) → N₂O₄(g). This is a second-order reaction with respect to NO₂. If the initial concentration of NO₂ ([NO₂]₀) is 0.100 M, and after 30 seconds (t = 30 s), the concentration of NO₂ ([NO₂]t) is measured to be 0.050 M. We want to calculate the rate constant (k). In this scenario, [A]₀ = 0.100 M, [A]t = 0.050 M, and t = 30 s. Since the reaction depends on the square of a single reactant's concentration, we use the formula: $$ \frac{1}{[A]_t} – \frac{1}{[A]_0} = kt $$ Plugging in the values: $$ \frac{1}{0.050 \, M} – \frac{1}{0.100 \, M} = k \times 30 \, s $$ $$ 20 \, M^{-1} – 10 \, M^{-1} = k \times 30 \, s $$ $$ 10 \, M^{-1} = k \times 30 \, s $$ $$ k = \frac{10 \, M^{-1}}{30 \, s} $$ $$ k \approx 0.333 \, M^{-1}s^{-1} $$ The calculated rate constant would be approximately 0.333 M⁻¹s⁻¹.