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Half-Life Explained: Zero Order vs First Order Reactions

Half-Life Explained: Zero Order vs First Order Reactions | SciSolveLab

Half-Life Explained: Zero Order vs First Order Reactions

Radioactive carbon-14 has a half-life of 5,730 years regardless of how much you have. But the alcohol in your bloodstream disappears at a fixed rate per hour — meaning the time to halve your blood alcohol level depends entirely on how much you started with. These two behaviours represent the fundamental difference between first order and zero order half-lives.

Two Half-Life Formulas 5 Worked Examples Side-by-Side Comparison Drug Dosing & Radiocarbon Graph Shapes

Understanding this distinction is one of the most important concepts in chemical kinetics.


What Is Half-Life in Chemistry?

The half-life (t½) of a reaction is the time required for the concentration of a reactant to fall to exactly half of its initial value.

Half-life is most famous from nuclear physics and radioactive decay, but it applies equally to chemical reactions of all kinds — drug metabolism, industrial reactions, food spoilage, and any process that can be described by a rate law.

The half-life depends on two things:

  1. The order of the reaction (zero, first, or second)
  2. The rate constant k (and sometimes the initial concentration)
🔑
The Central Question: What makes zero and first order half-lives fundamentally different is whether the half-life depends on the initial concentration or not. First order: no. Zero order: yes.

First Order Half-Life — The Constant Half-Life

For a first order reaction where rate = k[A], the integrated rate law is:

ln[A] = ln[A]₀ − kt Integrated rate law for first order kinetics

To find the half-life, set [A] = [A]₀/2:

1
ln([A]₀/2) = ln[A]₀ − k × t½ Set [A] = [A]₀/2
2
ln[A]₀ − ln(2) = ln[A]₀ − k × t½ Expand ln([A]₀/2)
3
k × t½ = ln(2) ln[A]₀ cancels — initial concentration disappears
4
t½ = ln(2) / k = 0.693 / k First order half-life — constant, independent of [A]₀ ✓
First Order Half-Life t½ = ln(2) / k = 0.693 / k The initial concentration [A]₀ cancels out completely — every half-life is identical.
🔵
Defining Property of First Order: The half-life of a first order reaction is constant — it does not depend on initial concentration. Every half-life period is identical. After each t½, exactly half of whatever remains is consumed.
Time elapsed Fraction remaining % remaining
01100%
1 × t½1/250%
2 × t½1/425%
3 × t½1/812.5%
4 × t½1/166.25%
5 × t½1/323.125%
n × t½(1/2)ⁿ(0.5)ⁿ × 100%

The general formula for concentration after n half-lives: [A] = [A]₀ × (1/2)ⁿ = [A]₀ × (0.5)ⁿ

This exponential decay pattern is mathematically identical to radioactive decay, compound interest in reverse, and the discharge of a capacitor.


Zero Order Half-Life — The Concentration-Dependent Half-Life

For a zero order reaction where rate = k, the integrated rate law is:

[A] = [A]₀ − kt Integrated rate law for zero order kinetics

To find the half-life, set [A] = [A]₀/2:

1
[A]₀/2 = [A]₀ − k × t½ Set [A] = [A]₀/2
2
k × t½ = [A]₀ − [A]₀/2 = [A]₀/2 [A]₀ does NOT cancel — it stays in the equation
3
t½ = [A]₀ / (2k) Zero order half-life — depends on [A]₀ ✓
Zero Order Half-Life t½ = [A]₀ / (2k) The initial concentration stays in the formula — each successive half-life is shorter.
🟣
Defining Property of Zero Order: The half-life of a zero order reaction depends directly on the initial concentration. The more reactant you start with, the longer the first half-life. But each successive half-life is shorter — because the new “initial concentration” for each period is smaller.
Half-life period Starting [A] t½ for this period
1st[A]₀[A]₀/(2k)
2nd[A]₀/2[A]₀/(4k) — half as long
3rd[A]₀/4[A]₀/(8k) — quarter as long
4th[A]₀/8[A]₀/(16k) — eighth as long
Complete0Total time = [A]₀/k

A zero order reaction reaches complete consumption at a finite time — unlike a first order reaction, which theoretically approaches zero asymptotically and never quite gets there.

Use our Reaction Order Calculator to calculate half-life for both zero and first order reactions with any initial concentration and rate constant.


Side-by-Side Comparison — Zero Order vs First Order Half-Life

Zero Order t½ = [A]₀ / (2k) Depends on [A]₀
Successive half-lives get shorter
Reaction reaches zero at finite time
First Order t½ = 0.693 / k Independent of [A]₀
All half-lives identical
Asymptotically approaches zero
🟣 Zero Order — Shrinking Half-Lives
1st t½
100%
2nd t½
50%
3rd t½
25%
4th t½
12.5%

Each bar = duration of that half-life period

🔵 First Order — Equal Half-Lives
1st t½
100%
2nd t½
100%
3rd t½
100%
4th t½
100%

All bars identical — constant duration

Property Zero Order First Order
Rate lawrate = krate = k[A]
Integrated law[A] = [A]₀ − ktln[A] = ln[A]₀ − kt
Half-life formulat½ = [A]₀/(2k)t½ = 0.693/k
Depends on [A]₀?YESNO
Successive half-livesGetting shorterAll identical
Reaches zero?YES — finite timeNO — asymptotic
Units of kM·s⁻¹s⁻¹
Linear graph[A] vs tln[A] vs t
Conceptual basisConstant amount consumed per timeConstant fraction consumed per time

Worked Examples

📘 Example 1 — First Order Half-Life from Rate Constant

Problem: A first order reaction has k = 0.0347 min⁻¹. Find the half-life.

t½ = 0.693 / k = 0.693 / 0.0347
✓ t½ = 19.97 minutes ≈ 20 minutes (constant — same at any [A]₀)

Check — concentration after 60 minutes (3 half-lives):
[A] = [A]₀ × (0.5)³ = [A]₀ × 0.125 → 12.5% of initial concentration remains ✓

📙 Example 2 — Zero Order Half-Life with Successive Periods

Problem: A zero order reaction has k = 0.050 M/min and [A]₀ = 1.20 M. Find: (a) the first half-life, (b) the second half-life, (c) when all reactant is consumed.

Given: k = 0.050 M/min, [A]₀ = 1.20 M
(a) t½ = [A]₀/(2k) = 1.20/(2 × 0.050) = 1.20/0.10 = 12 min
    After 12 min: [A] = 0.60 M

(b) New [A]₀ = 0.60 M → t½ = 0.60/(2 × 0.050) = 6 min
    After 6 more min (18 min total): [A] = 0.30 M

(c) Total time = [A]₀/k = 1.20/0.050 = 24 min
✓ t½(1st) = 12 min, t½(2nd) = 6 min, complete at 24 min

Notice: total time = 24 min = 2 × first half-life (12 min). This is always true for zero order reactions.

📗 Example 3 — Finding k from Half-Life Data (Drug Pharmacokinetics)

Problem: A drug follows first order elimination kinetics. Its plasma concentration halves every 4.5 hours. Find k. How much drug remains after 24 hours if [A]₀ = 100 ng/mL?

k = 0.693/t½ = 0.693/4.5 = 0.154 hr⁻¹

[A] = [A]₀ × e^(−kt) = 100 × e^(−0.154 × 24)
[A] = 100 × e^(−3.696) = 100 × 0.0248 = 2.48 ng/mL
✓ k = 0.154 hr⁻¹  |  [A] at 24 hr = 2.48 ng/mL

Check using half-lives: 24 hr / 4.5 hr = 5.33 half-lives → [A] = 100 × (0.5)^5.33 = 2.49 ng/mL ✓

📒 Example 4 — Determining Reaction Order from Half-Life Data

Problem: An experimentalist measures these half-lives at different initial concentrations. What is the reaction order?

[A]₀ (M)Measured t½ (min)
0.205.0
0.4010.0
0.8020.0
1.6040.0
When [A]₀ doubles, t½ also doubles → t½ ∝ [A]₀
This proportionality is the signature of zero order kinetics.

Find k: k = [A]₀/(2t½) = 0.20/(2 × 5.0) = 0.020 M/min
Check: k = 0.80/(2 × 20.0) = 0.020 M/min ✓
✓ Zero order reaction, k = 0.020 M/min
📓 Example 5 — How Many Half-Lives to Reach a Target Concentration?

Problem: A first order reaction starts at [A]₀ = 0.500 M. How many half-lives are needed to reach [A] = 0.031 M?

[A]/[A]₀ = 0.031/0.500 = 0.062 = (0.5)ⁿ

Taking log: n × log(0.5) = log(0.062)
n = log(0.062)/log(0.5) = (−1.208)/(−0.301)
✓ n = 4.01 ≈ 4 half-lives

Check: (0.5)⁴ = 0.0625 × 0.500 = 0.031 M ✓


The Biological Significance of Constant Half-Lives

The fact that first order reactions have a constant half-life has profound implications in medicine and biology.

💊

Drug Dosing and Pharmacokinetics

Most drugs are eliminated from the body by first order kinetics — enzymatic metabolism and renal filtration both follow first order rate laws at therapeutic concentrations. A drug with a 6-hour half-life will be at 50% of its initial level after 6 hours, 25% after 12 hours, 12.5% after 18 hours, and less than 2% after 42 hours (7 half-lives). Clinicians use the rule of thumb that a drug is essentially eliminated after 5 half-lives (3.125% remains). Fluoxetine (Prozac) has a half-life of 1–4 days and an active metabolite with 4–16 days — which is why it takes weeks to reach steady state and weeks to wash out.

☢️

Radiocarbon Dating

Carbon-14 has a half-life of 5,730 years and decays by first order kinetics. Living organisms continuously exchange carbon with their environment, maintaining a constant ratio of ¹⁴C to ¹²C. When an organism dies, the exchange stops and the ¹⁴C decays away at its constant first order rate. By measuring the fraction of ¹⁴C remaining, scientists can calculate the age. A sample with 25% of its original ¹⁴C has gone through 2 half-lives: age ≈ 2 × 5,730 = 11,460 years. This method works reliably for samples up to about 50,000 years old (approximately 8–9 half-lives).

🍺

Why Alcohol Elimination Differs

Alcohol (ethanol) follows zero order kinetics in the liver because alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) is saturated at typical drinking concentrations. The practical consequence: a person with a BAC of 0.16% (double the legal driving limit) takes exactly twice as long to sober up as someone at 0.08% — because the elimination rate is fixed at approximately 0.015% BAC per hour, regardless of concentration. This is fundamentally different from caffeine, which follows first order kinetics with a half-life of about 5 hours. Two beers and one beer do NOT leave the body proportionally — the extra alcohol adds extra time because the rate is fixed, not fractional.


The Graph Comparison — What Each Looks Like

Understanding the shape of the concentration-vs-time graph helps you immediately identify reaction order and half-life behaviour:

Concentration vs Time — Zero Order vs First Order
Time → [A] [A]₀ t½/2 2t½ 1st order Zero order Zero order (linear) First order (curve)

Zero order [A] vs t graph: Straight line declining at constant slope −k. Equal time intervals show equal drops in concentration. Line reaches the x-axis at time t = [A]₀/k. Half-life intervals get shorter and shorter as the line approaches zero.

First order [A] vs t graph: Exponential decay curve. Equal time intervals show equal fractional drops (not equal absolute drops). Curve approaches the x-axis asymptotically — never quite reaches zero. Half-life intervals are all identical widths.


Common Mistakes with Half-Life Calculations

❌ Applying the Constant Half-Life Rule to Zero Order Reactions

t½ = 0.693/k applies ONLY to first order reactions. For zero order, t½ = [A]₀/(2k) and changes with initial concentration. Using the wrong formula gives a completely wrong answer.

✅ Always identify the reaction order first. Then apply the correct half-life formula for that order.

❌ Forgetting to Identify Reaction Order First

Before calculating any half-life, you must know the reaction order. Ask: does the half-life depend on concentration? If yes → zero order (or second order). If no → first order.

✅ The half-life formula is different for every reaction order. Order identification is always step one.

❌ Using t/t½ for Zero Order When t½ Is Not Constant

For zero order reactions, you cannot simply divide total time by t½ to find concentration — because t½ changes with each period. Use the integrated rate law [A] = [A]₀ − kt directly instead.

✅ For zero order: use [A] = [A]₀ − kt directly. The n-half-lives shortcut only works when t½ is constant (first order).

❌ Confusing Half-Life with Mean Lifetime

The mean lifetime τ (tau) is the average time a single molecule survives before reacting. For first order: τ = 1/k = t½/0.693 = 1.443 × t½. Half-life and mean lifetime are related but not equal.

✅ t½ = 0.693/k for first order. Mean lifetime τ = 1/k. They differ by a factor of ln(2) ≈ 0.693.

❌ Wrong Units for k When Calculating t½

If k is in min⁻¹, the half-life comes out in minutes. If k is in s⁻¹, t½ is in seconds. Always check that k and t½ are in consistent time units.

✅ The units of t½ are the inverse of the time unit in k. k in hr⁻¹ gives t½ in hours. Always check unit consistency.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the half-life formula for a zero order reaction?+

t½ = [A]₀/(2k), where [A]₀ is the initial concentration and k is the rate constant. Unlike first order, this half-life changes with concentration — larger initial concentration means longer first half-life.

What is the half-life formula for a first order reaction?+

t½ = ln(2)/k = 0.693/k, where k is the first order rate constant in units of s⁻¹ (or min⁻¹, hr⁻¹ etc.). This half-life is constant — it does not depend on initial concentration.

Why is first order half-life constant but zero order half-life is not?+

First order reactions consume a constant fraction of reactant per unit time, so halving takes the same time regardless of starting amount. Zero order reactions consume a constant amount per unit time, so halving a larger amount takes longer than halving a smaller amount.

How many half-lives does it take to eliminate 99% of a substance?+

For first order kinetics: after n half-lives, fraction remaining = (0.5)ⁿ. For 99% elimination (1% remaining): (0.5)ⁿ = 0.01 → n = log(0.01)/log(0.5) = 6.64 half-lives. Practically, 7 half-lives removes more than 99% of a first order reactant.

Is radioactive decay zero order or first order?+

Radioactive decay is always first order — the decay rate is proportional to the number of atoms present. Each nucleus decays independently with a fixed probability per unit time, giving a constant half-life regardless of how much material is present. This is why radiocarbon dating works — the half-life of ¹⁴C is always 5,730 years.

Can half-life be used for second order reactions?+

Yes — second order reactions have a half-life of t½ = 1/(k[A]₀), which also depends on initial concentration (like zero order), but successive half-lives get progressively longer rather than shorter. Each subsequent half-life doubles in duration as concentration decreases.


⚗️ Calculate Half-Life Instantly

Our Reaction Order Calculator calculates the half-life for zero order, first order, and second order reactions. Enter your rate constant and initial concentration (where needed) and it shows the half-life formula, the calculation, and a table of concentration at each successive half-life period. For exponential decay calculations including radioactive decay, see our Exponential Growth and Decay Calculator.


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