11.5 A Simple Reaction Mechanism: Two Consecutive Steps 511
The solution of this equation is carried out in Appendix B for the case that no B or F
is present at timet0. The solution is[B]tk 1 [A] 0
k 2 −k 1(e−k^1 t−e−k^2 t) (11.5-6)Ifk 1 k 2 , the solution in Eq. (11.5-6) cannot be used. See Problem 11.34 for the
solution in this case.Exercise 11.20
Substitute the function of Eq. (11.5-6) into the original differential equation of Eq. (11.5-5) and
show that it satisfies this equation.The concentration of F is obtained from[F][A] 0 −[A]−[B] (11.5-7)Figure 11.6a shows the concentrations of all three substances for the case thatk 1
0 .100 s−^1 andk 2 0 .500 s−^1 , and Figure 11.6b shows the concentrations for the caseConcentrationConcentrationTime[A][B]0 10 s0(a)20 sTime
(b)[B][F]
[A][F]10 s 20 sFigure 11.6 The Concentrations of Substances A, B, and F for Consecutive Reac-
tions.(a) The case thatk 1 0.10 s−^1 and thatk 2 0.50 s−^1. (b) The case thatk 1
0.50 s−^1 and thatk 2 0.10 s−^1.