- The half-life,
, is the time it takes for half the initial reactant concentration to react.
- For a first-order reaction
, the half-life is
- For a second-order reaction
, the half-life is
or
.
- For a zeroth-order reaction
, the half-life is
.
The half life, , is the amount of time it takes for the initial concentration,
, to decrease to half its concentration such that
.
For a first-order reaction (see section 1.4),
.
To solve for the half-life, we replace with
and
with
.
Solving for the half-life gives
.
Noting that , the first-order half-life formula is more commonly written as
(Equation 1).
Note that Equation 1 does not depend on , so the half-life is independent of the sample size.
For a second-order reaction, the half-life formula will differ slightly depending on the convention (see section 1.5), but the the calculated value will be the same. Below, the convention with is used on the left and the convention
is used on the right. As above, we'll (1) start with the integrated rate law, (2) replace
with
and
with
, and finally (3) solve for
.
1. or
2. or
or
3. or
(Equations 2a and 2b)
You can determine which version of this equation to use based on whether the rate in a question is defined as or
.
For a zeroth-order reaction (see Section 1.6), the integrated rate law is
Replacing with
and
with
gives
Solving for gives the zeroth-order half-life equation
(Equation 3)
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