Second Order Reaction
Rate laws, integrated form, half-life, characteristic plots, and real-world examples
1. Definition & Rate Laws
A second order reaction is a chemical reaction whose rate depends on the concentration of one reactant raised to the second power or on the concentrations of two different reactants each raised to the first power. Two common cases exist:
The rate is proportional to the square of the concentration of a single reactant.
The rate is proportional to the product of the concentrations of two different reactants.
2. Integrated Rate Law (Derivation)
Starting from the differential rate law for a single-reactant second order reaction (2A â products):
Separate variables and integrate:
Where:
– [A]â = concentration of A at time t
– [A]â = initial concentration of A
– k = second order rate constant
Key diagnostic feature: For a second order reaction, a plot of 1/[A]â versus time t yields a straight line with slope k and intercept 1/[A]â.
3. Half-Life (tâ/â) Derivation
The half-life is the time required for the concentration of a reactant to decrease to half its initial value. For a second order reaction, set [A]â = [A]â/2 in the integrated rate law:
Important observation: Unlike first order reactions, the half-life of a second order reaction is not constant. It depends inversely on the initial concentration. The higher the initial concentration, the shorter the half-life. As the reaction proceeds and concentration decreases, the halfâlife increases.
4. Characteristic Graphs & Experimental Determination
Two important plots help identify a second order reaction:
The concentration decreases in a curved manner. The curve is not exponential; it decays more gradually.
This gives a straight line with slope = k and intercept = 1/[A]â. This is the definitive test for second order kinetics.
Figure: Left â Concentration vs. time for a second order reaction (decaying curve). Right â Linear plot of 1/[A] vs. time, with slope = k.
5. Real-World Examples of Second Order Reactions
This gas-phase reaction follows second order kinetics: Rate = k [HI]^2. The mechanism involves a single bimolecular collision between two HI molecules.
This reaction is second order with respect to NOâ (Rate = k [NOâ]^2). It is used to study atmospheric chemistry and reaction mechanisms.
When water is in large excess, its concentration is effectively constant, and the reaction becomes pseudoâfirst order. But under conditions where both reactants are at comparable concentrations, it follows second order kinetics: Rate = k [ester][HâO].
This is a classic second order reaction (Rate = k [ester][OHâ»]). It is often studied in undergraduate kinetics labs.
6. Comparison: Second Order vs. First Order
| Property | First Order Reaction | Second Order Reaction |
|---|---|---|
| Rate law | Rate = k [A] | Rate = k [A]^2 or k[A][B] |
| Integrated rate law | ln[A]â = ln[A]â – kt | 1/[A]â = 1/[A]â + kt |
| Linear plot | ln[A] vs. t | 1/[A] vs. t |
| Half-life | tâ/â = ln2 / k (constant) | tâ/â = 1/(k[A]â) (depends on [A]â) |
| Units of k | sâ»Âč (timeâ»Âč) | Mâ»Âč·sâ»Âč (L·molâ»Âč·sâ»Âč) |
7. Second Order with Two Different Reactants
For the reaction A + B â products, the rate law is Rate = k [A][B]. Let the initial concentrations be [A]â and [B]â, and let x be the amount reacted at time t. Then:
Integration gives (assuming [A]â â [B]â):
If [A]â = [B]â, the equation reduces to the single-reactant case: 1/[A]â = 1/[A]â + k t.
8. Graphical Determination of Rate Constant
For a second order reaction (single reactant), the linear relationship 1/[A]â = 1/[A]â + kt allows direct determination of k from experimental data.
Procedure:
- Measure concentration [A] at various times t.
- Calculate 1/[A] for each time point.
- Plot 1/[A] versus time.
- The slope of the best-fit line equals the rate constant k.
- The intercept is 1/[A]â.
This method is robust and widely used in kinetics experiments.
9. Worked Example: Dimerization of NOâ
The gas-phase reaction 2 NOâ â NâOâ is second order with respect to NOâ. At a certain temperature, k = 0.54 Mâ»Âč·sâ»Âč. If the initial concentration of NOâ is 0.20 M, calculate the concentration after 30 seconds.
The concentration of NOâ after 30 seconds is approximately 0.047 M.
10. Video Lecture: Second Order Reaction (Urdu/Hindi)
Detailed explanation of second order kinetics, integrated rate laws, half-life derivation, and problem-solving â presented in Urdu/Hindi.
11. Summary & Key Takeaways
- A second order reaction has a rate proportional to the square of a single reactant concentration or to the product of two different reactant concentrations.
- The integrated rate law for a single reactant is 1/[A]â = 1/[A]â + k t.
- The half-life is tâ/â = 1/(k [A]â) and is concentration-dependent.
- A plot of 1/[A] versus time gives a straight line with slope = k.
- Common examples include decomposition of HI and dimerization of NOâ.
- Units of k are Mâ»Âč·sâ»Âč (L·molâ»Âč·sâ»Âč).
- For two different reactants, the integrated rate law is more complex, but simplifies when initial concentrations are equal or one reactant is in excess.
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