Physical Chemistry Third Edition

(C. Jardin) #1

1050 25 Equilibrium Statistical Mechanics. I. The Probability Distribution for Molecular States


for the first pick, there areg−1 choices for the second pick, until there areg−(N−1)
choices for theNth pick.

Number of ways of choosingP(g,N)g(g−1)(g−2)···(g−(N−1))



g!
(g−N)!

(25.2-9)

The quantityP(g,N) is called the number of permutations ofNobjects chosen from
gobjects. However, in our case the order in which theNoccupied states are chosen
is immaterial, so we must divide byN!, the number of ways of permutingNobjects.
The result is called the number ofcombinationsofgobjects takenNat a time.

tC(g,N)

g!
(g−N)!N!

(25.2-10)

The expression in Eq. (25.2-10) is also the expression for abinomial coefficient, which
is the coefficient of theaNbg−Nterm in the expression for (a+b)g.
We now apply Eq. (25.2-10) to energy levelj. There areNjfactors in the quotient
gj!/(gj−Nj)! that do not cancel. Since in our case of dilute occupationgjNj, all
of the factors in the product are nearly equal togj, and the product of these factors is
approximately equal tog
Nj
j. To a good approximation for fermion molecules

ti≈

g
Nj
j
Nj!

(25.2-11)

This expression givestj1 forNj0 (an unoccupied level) since 0! is defined to
equal unity and since any number raised to the zero power equals unity.

EXAMPLE25.2

Find the percent error in approximating Eq. (25.2-6) by Eq. (25.2-11):
a.Forgj100 andNj 3
b.Forgj1000000 andNj 3
Solution
a.Forgj100 andNj 3

tj

(100)(99)(98)
100!


970200
100!

tj(approx)

(100)^3
100!


1000000
100!
3 .07% error

We do not evaluate 100! because it is a large number.
b.Forgj1000000 andNj 3

tj
(1000000)(999999)(999998)
1000000!


9. 9999700 × 1017
1000000!

tj(approx)
(1000000)^3
1000000!


1. 00000 × 1018
1000000!

0 .00030% error
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