Concept:
For a first-order reaction, the rate constant \( k \) is determined by the integrated rate law:
$$
k = \frac{2.303}{t} \log \left(\frac{[R]_0}{[R]_t}\right)
$$
Where:
[R]0 = Initial concentration of the reactant.
[R]t = Concentration of the reactant at time t.
t = Time elapsed.
Step 1: Identify the given values.
Initial concentration \( [R]_0 = 1.24 \times 10^{-2} \, \text{mol L}^{-1} \)
Final concentration \( [R]_t = 0.20 \times 10^{-2} \, \text{mol L}^{-1} \)
Time \( t = 60 \, \text{minutes} \)
Step 2: Apply the first-order rate equation.
$$
k = \frac{2.303}{60} \log \left(\frac{1.24 \times 10^{-2}}{0.20 \times 10^{-2}}\right)
$$
$$
k = \frac{2.303}{60} \log (6.2)
$$
Step 3: Solve for \( k \).
Using \( \log(6.2) \approx 0.7924 \):
$$
k = \frac{2.303 \times 0.7924}{60}
$$
$$
k = \frac{1.8249}{60}
$$
$$
k = 0.0304 \, \text{min}^{-1}
$$