Well using k' notation indicates the use of the isolation technique
No it does not. It merely serves to distinguish one rate constant from another. Thus in my example above, k' is the rate constant in the expression d[A]/dt = -k'[A]
2. It is
NOT equal to k[B ]
0 (wherever [B ]
0 might have come from in this instance).
There are just not enough letters in the alphabet for all the things we want to talk about in science, so many of them have to be used for a number of different things. You may have read in a book about the isolation technique, where the authors used k' for k[B ]
0, but you must not assume this is a unique usage and k' can never mean anything else.
So am I right in thinking that the only way that -d[A]/dt = k[A]^2 can work out is that if its a complex reaction and not an elementary one?
No. Generally -d[A]/dt = k[A]^2 is an empirical rate equation, indicating that the rate depends on the square of [A]. It doesn't necessarily imply anything about the mechanism in terms of elementary reactions. If you go the other way around, and say the elementary reaction is 2K
products, then it is reasonable to postulate that for that elementary reaction rate is proportional to [A]
2. Whether you write that as k[A]
2 or 2k[A]
2 or 478k[A]
2 is immaterial, but the value of k in each expression will be different, which is why I used k, k' and k'' above.