The rate constant, represented by k in kinetics, is a proportionality constant that relates the reaction rate to the concentrations of reactants for a given reaction at a specific temperature. In the mathematical expression for the rate law of zero-order reactions, \( \text{rate} = -k[\mathrm{A}]^0 = -k \), k is a measure of the inherent rate at which the reaction proceeds.
Since zero-order reactions have a rate that does not depend on reactant concentration, the rate constant k actually represents the reaction rate itself. It is unique to a particular reaction and can be affected by external conditions such as temperature, but within the context of our problem, knowing that k remains the same allows us to predict the concentration of A over time with great accuracy.
- The larger the rate constant, the faster the product forms.
- Since the reaction is zero-order, the constant gives the rate of reaction as a fixed value, which applies at all concentrations of the reactant until the reactant is depleted.