Physical Chemistry Third Edition

(C. Jardin) #1

4.5 Multicomponent Systems 187


EXAMPLE4.19

Find the expression for the partial molar Helmholtz energy of a one-component ideal gas as
a function of temperature and pressure.
Solution
AAmμ−PVmμ◦+RTln

(
P
P◦

)
−P
RT
P

μ◦+RTln

(
P
P◦

)
−RT

According to Dalton’s law of partial pressures, each gas in a mixture of ideal gases
behaves as though it were alone in the container. Equation (4.5-23) applies to any
substance in an ideal gas mixture:

μiμ◦i+RTln

(

Pi
P◦

)

(substanceiin an
ideal gas mixture)

(4.5-26)

whereμ◦iis the chemical potential of substanceiin the standard state at pressureP◦
andPiis its partial pressure. All of the other equations for one-component ideal gases
apply as well.

EXAMPLE4.20

Calculateμi−μ◦ifor argon gas in dry air at 298.15 K and 1.000 atm, assuming that the gases
are ideal. The mole fraction of argon is 0.00934.
Solution

μi−μ◦iRTln

(
Pi
P◦

)

(8.3145 J K−^1 mol−^1 )(298.15) ln

(
(0.00934 atm)(101325 Pa atm−^1 )
100000 Pa

)

−11550 J mol−^1

Exercise 4.17
a.Calculateμi−μ◦ifor argon gas at 298.15 K and a partial pressure of 1.000 atm.
b.Calculateμi−μ◦ifor argon gas at 298.15 K and a partial pressure of 10.00 atm.

In a mixture of gases that cannot be assumed to be ideal, we definefi, the fugacity
of componenti, by the relation

μiμ◦i+RTln

(

fi
P◦

)

(definition offi) (4.5-27)

whereμ◦iis the same standard-state chemical potential as for the pure gas: the hypo-
thetical ideal-gas state at pressureP◦and whatever temperature is being considered.
We will not discuss the evaluation of the fugacity in a mixture of nonideal gases.
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