Half-life - Formulas For Half-life in Exponential Decay

Formulas For Half-life in Exponential Decay

An exponential decay process can be described by any of the following three equivalent formulas:

where

  • N0 is the initial quantity of the substance that will decay (this quantity may be measured in grams, moles, number of atoms, etc.),
  • N(t) is the quantity that still remains and has not yet decayed after a time t,
  • t1/2 is the half-life of the decaying quantity,
  • τ is a positive number called the mean lifetime of the decaying quantity,
  • λ is a positive number called the decay constant of the decaying quantity.

The three parameters, and λ are all directly related in the following way:

where ln(2) is the natural logarithm of 2 (approximately 0.693).

Click "show" to see a detailed derivation of the relationship between half-life, decay time, and decay constant.
Start with the three equations

We want to find a relationship between, and λ, such that these three equations describe exactly the same exponential decay process. Comparing the equations, we find the following condition:

Next, we'll take the natural logarithm of each of these quantities.

Using the properties of logarithms, this simplifies to the following:

Since the natural logarithm of e is 1, we get:

Canceling the factor of t and plugging in, the eventual result is:

By plugging in and manipulating these relationships, we get all of the following equivalent descriptions of exponential decay, in terms of the half-life:

Regardless of how it's written, we can plug into the formula to get

  • as expected (this is the definition of "initial quantity")
  • as expected (this is the definition of half-life)
  • , i.e. amount approaches zero as t approaches infinity as expected (the longer we wait, the less remains).

Read more about this topic:  Half-life

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