Kinetics is a study of the factors affecting the rate of a reaction.
The
rate of reaction is equal to the change in concentration of a reactant or product, divided by the time taken for reaction and the coefficient of the substance in the balanced equation. The negative change in concentration of a reactant is used so that rate is always positive.
For aA + bB

cC + dD
A, B, C and D are substances.
a, b, c and d are coefficients.
| reaction rate = | - Δ[A] | = | - Δ[B] | = | Δ[C] | = | Δ[D] |
| a × Δt | b × Δt | c × Δt | d × Δt |
The
differential rate law (equation) is the mathematical relationship between rate and the concentration of substances upon which rate depends.
General form of differential rate law:
rate = k[A]x[B]y.x and y are experimentally determined.
k, the rate constant, is constant for a reaction at a temperature.
The
order of a reaction in a substance is given by the exponent on its concentration.
The
overall reaction order is given by the sum of the exponents.
A reaction with the rate law above is x order in A, y order in B and x+ y order overall.
If x is 1, then it is first order in A.
If y is also 1, it is first order in B, and the reaction is overall second order.