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Show that the units of rate constant for a first order reaction do not depend upon the units of concentration. - Chemistry (Theory)

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Question

Show that the units of rate constant for a first order reaction do not depend upon the units of concentration.
Numerical
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Solution

For a first-order reaction, the rate law is:

Rate = k[A]

Rate is the change in concentration per unit time, so its units are:

mol L−1 s−1 (or any concentration/time unit)

From the rate law

\[\ce{k = \frac{Rate}{[A]}}\]

= \[\ce{\frac{mol L^{-1} s^{-1}}{mol L^{-1}}}\]

= s−1

The units of the rate constant (k) for a first-order reaction are s−1.

These units do not depend on the units of concentration because concentration cancels out in the expression. Hence, for a first-order reaction, k is always expressed in time−1 (e.g., s−1, min−1).

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Chapter 4: Chemical Kinetics - REVIEW EXERCISES [Page 237]

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Nootan Chemistry Part 1 and 2 [English] Class 12 ISC
Chapter 4 Chemical Kinetics
REVIEW EXERCISES | Q 4.40 | Page 237
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