Hi, I'm marking some work and know that to get kinetic info on a first order reaction a plot of Ln[A]t-Ln[A]o or Ln[A] against time will have a gradient of -k. But a couple of the students have plotted Ln[A]o-Ln[A]t against time and got a gradient of k. This seems wrong to me, but as my maths is not the best I wanted advice on whether it can be done this way. (using the logic below)
Ln[A]t-Ln[A]o=-kt
-Ln[A]t-Ln[A]o = kt
Ln[A]o-Ln[A]t = kt
Any help would be appreciated
First the correct term is
slope, not gradient (a gradient is a vector).
Second if -k is the slope of the line with equation
Ln[A] = Ln[A]
0 - kt
then the slope will be -k for the line
Ln[A] - Ln[A]
0 = - kt
and the slope will be k for the line
Ln[A]
0 - Ln[A] = kt
One line will look as
\ and the other will look as
/ The first slope will be negative and the second positive, but in both cases you obtain the same value of k.
If I say you that Z=5 and W=1, which is the value of T using the equation (Z - W = T)? And using the equation (W - Z = -T)?