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Question
Derive the relation Ct = C0 e−kt for a first order reaction.
Derivation
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Solution
Consider the first-order reaction
\[\ce{A -> products}\]
The differential rate law is
\[\ce{- \frac{dC}{dt} = kC}\] ...(1)
where:
C = concentration of A at time t
C0 = concentration of A at t = 0
k = first-order rate constant
Seperate variables
\[\ce{\frac{dC}{C} = -k dt}\] ...(2)
Integrating Eq. (2) between limits C = C0 at t = 0 and C = Ct at t = t:
\[\int\limits_{C_0}^{C_t}\frac {dC}{C} = -k\int\limits_{0}^{t}dt\]
ln Ct − ln C0 = −kt
\[\ce{ln \frac{C_t}{C_0} = -kt}\]
Taking antilogarithm
\[\ce{\frac{C_t}{C_0} = e^{-kt}}\]
Ct = C0 e−kt
This is the integrated rate equation for a first-order reaction, showing that the concentration decays exponentially with time.
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