Analyze kinetic models with flexible inputs and outputs. Switch goals without rebuilding your experiment assumptions. Designed for students, labs, and precise reaction monitoring tasks.
This page keeps a single-column content flow, while the input area expands to three columns on large screens, two on medium screens, and one on mobile.
Choose a goal first. The page will tell you which values are essential.
This example compares half-life behavior for identical starting concentrations under three common kinetic models.
| Reaction Order | Initial Concentration [A]₀ | Rate Constant k | Half-life Formula | Half-life Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zero-order | 1.20 mol/L | 0.10 mol/L·min⁻¹ | t½ = [A]₀ / 2k | 6 min |
| First-order | 1.20 mol/L | 0.12 min⁻¹ | t½ = ln(2) / k | 5.776 min |
| Second-order | 1.20 mol/L | 0.18 L·mol⁻¹·min⁻¹ | t½ = 1 / k[A]₀ | 4.63 min |
Different reaction orders use different kinetic laws. The calculator automatically applies the correct relationship after you choose the reaction order.
[A]t = [A]0 − kt
t½ = [A]0 / 2k
[A]t = [A]0 e^(−kt)
t½ = ln(2) / k
t = ln([A]0 / [A]t) / k
1 / [A]t = 1 / [A]0 + kt
[A]t = [A]0 / (1 + k[A]0t)
t½ = 1 / k[A]0
The graph plots concentration against time from the resolved values. Exported results include both summary metrics and graph data points.
Reaction half-life is the time needed for a reactant concentration to decrease to half of its starting value under a defined kinetic model and fixed conditions.
The governing rate law changes with order. Zero and second-order half-lives depend on starting concentration, while first-order half-life remains constant at a given temperature.
Yes. You can use mol/L, mmol/L, mg/L, or another consistent unit. The calculator treats the concentration unit as a label and keeps it throughout.
Zero-order uses concentration per time, first-order uses inverse time, and second-order uses inverse concentration-time. The calculator displays the matching rate-constant unit automatically.
Zero-order decay is linear. Once the calculated concentration falls to zero, the reactant is fully consumed, so the plotted concentration is held at zero.
Some combinations of remaining concentration, rate constant, and time imply a mathematically impossible starting concentration. The calculator blocks those combinations and asks for adjusted inputs.
Yes. The page includes CSV and PDF export buttons after a successful calculation. The exports include the result summary and a sample of graph data.
Yes. It helps compare orders, inspect decay trends, validate manual work, and produce quick output tables for classroom exercises or experimental reviews.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.