The half-life for the second-order reaction of a substance A is 55.8 s when concentration of initial A = 0.69 M. Calculate the time needed for the concentration of A to decrease to the following values.

(a) 1/8 of its original value

(b) 1/9 of its original value

i tried multiplying 7/8 and 8/9 by .69 each to find the respective initial concentrations of A to then use for the half life equation t=1/ k*[ A ]

use t= (1/ [ A]) - (1/ [A ]o) over k

t1/2 = 1/k[Ao]

1/(A) - 1/(Ao) = kt

I think these should get both a and b.

To calculate the time needed for the concentration of substance A to decrease to a certain value, we can use the half-life equation for a second-order reaction:

t = (1 / (k * [A₀])) * (1 / (final concentration - [A₀]))

Where:
- t is the time needed for the concentration to decrease
- k is the rate constant of the reaction
- [A₀] is the initial concentration of substance A

As given in the question, the half-life for the reaction is 55.8 s and the initial concentration of A is 0.69 M.

(a) To find the time needed for the concentration to decrease to 1/8 of its original value, we can substitute the values into the equation:

final concentration = 1/8 * [A₀]

t = (1 / (k * 0.69)) * (1 / (1/8 * 0.69))
t = (1 / (k * 0.69)) * (8 / 0.69)
t = 8 / (k * 0.69)

(b) Similarly, to find the time needed for the concentration to decrease to 1/9 of its original value:

final concentration = 1/9 * [A₀]

t = (1 / (k * 0.69)) * (1 / (1/9 * 0.69))
t = (1 / (k * 0.69)) * (9 / 0.69)
t = 9 / (k * 0.69)

To calculate the time needed for the concentration to decrease to the specified values, we would need to know the value of the rate constant (k) for the reaction.