The reaction 2NO2--->2NO+O2 has the rate constant k= 0.68 m-1s-1.

If the initial concentration of NO2 is 9.30×10−2 M, how long it would take for the concentration to decrease to 2.00×10−2 M ?
please answer and show the steps

To solve this problem, we can use the first-order rate equation:

Rate = k * [NO2]

We can rearrange this equation to solve for time (t):

t = ln([NO2]₀ / [NO2]) / k

Where [NO2]₀ is the initial concentration of NO2 and [NO2] is the final concentration of NO2.

Given:

Initial concentration [NO2]₀ = 9.30×10^(-2) M
Final concentration [NO2] = 2.00×10^(-2) M
Rate constant k = 0.68 m^(-1)s^(-1)

Substituting these values into the equation, we have:

t = ln(9.30×10^(-2) / 2.00×10^(-2)) / 0.68

t = ln(4.65) / 0.68

Using a calculator,

t ≈ 2.29 s

Therefore, it would take approximately 2.29 seconds for the concentration of NO2 to decrease from 9.30×10^(-2) M to 2.00×10^(-2) M.

To determine how long it would take for the concentration of NO2 to decrease to 2.00×10−2 M, we can use the integrated rate equation for a first-order reaction:

ln([NO2]t/[NO2]0) = -kt

Where [NO2]t is the concentration of NO2 at time t, [NO2]0 is the initial concentration of NO2, k is the rate constant, and t is the time.

In this case, we are given the initial concentration [NO2]0 = 9.30×10−2 M, the final concentration [NO2]t = 2.00×10−2 M, and the rate constant k = 0.68 m-1s-1.

Plugging in these values into the equation, we get:

ln(2.00×10−2/9.30×10−2) = (-0.68 m-1s-1) * t

Simplifying the left side of the equation:

ln(2.00×10−2/9.30×10−2) = ln(2.00/9.30)

Now, we can solve for t by rearranging the equation:

(-0.68 m-1s-1) * t = ln(2.00/9.30)

Dividing both sides by -0.68 m-1s-1:

t = ln(2.00/9.30) / -0.68

Using a calculator, we can find the value of t:

t ≈ 4.46 seconds (rounded to two decimal places)

Therefore, it would take approximately 4.46 seconds for the concentration of NO2 to decrease to 2.00×10−2 M.

ln (A)t - ln(A)o = -kt

ln2.00x10-2 - ln(9.30x10-2) = -.68 t

t = 2.26s

Hope this is right!