258 6 The Thermodynamics of Solutions
6.3 Activity and Activity Coefficients
We have obtained several relations for the chemical potential that look quite similar.
For an ideal gas, either pure or in a mixture,
μiμ◦i+RTln
(
Pi
P◦
)
(ideal gas) (6.3-1)
For a component of an ideal solution or for the solvent in a dilute solution,
μiμ∗i+RTln(xi)
(component of an ideal solution
or solvent in a dilute solution) (6.3-2)
For a solute in a dilute solution we had a choice of three relations:
μiμ◦i(H)+RTln(xi) (solute in a dilute solution) (6.3-3)
μiμ
◦(m)
i +RTln(mi/m
◦) (solute in a dilute solution) (6.3-4)
μiμ
◦(c)
i +RTln(ci/c
◦) (solute in a dilute solution) (6.3-5)
The Definition of the Activity
In each of the preceding five equations the chemical potential is equal to a standard-state
chemical potential plus a term that consists ofRTtimes the logarithm of a composition
variable. We now want to write a single equation that will apply to all cases:
μiμ◦i+RTln(ai) (defines the activityai) (6.3-6)
whereμ◦iis the chemical potential of substanceiin the appropriate standard state and
where this equation definesai, theactivityof substancei.
Comparison of Eq. (6.3-6) with the preceding five equations shows that
ai
Pi
P◦
(ideal gas) (6.3-7)
aixi
(component of an ideal solution
or solvent in a dilute solution)
(6.3-8)
aixi (dilute solute, mole fraction description) (6.3-9)
ai
mi
m◦
(dilute solute, molality description) (6.3-10)
ai
ci
c◦
(dilute solute, concentration description) (6.3-11)