Physical Chemistry Third Edition

(C. Jardin) #1
9.7 The Model System with Potential Energy 421

Solution
a.

u(σ) 4 ε

[(
σ
σ

) 12


σ

) 6 ]
 4 ε(1−1) 0

b.At an extremum, the derivativedu/dris equal to zero:

du
dr
 4 ε

[
− 12 σ^12

1
r^13

+ 6 σ^6

1
r^7

]
 0

0  4 ε

(
6 σ^6

1
r^7

)(

2 σ^6
r^6

+ 1

)

This expression equals zero ifr→∞or if

r 21 /^6 σ 1. 12246 σ

The minimum is atrrmin 21 /^6 σ. There is a relative maximum atr→∞.

Exercise 9.21
a.Show that

uLJ(rmin)−ε (9.7-8)

b.The force in therdirection is given by−du/dr. Show that the force on one particle due to
another particle at distanceris

Fr 4 ε

(
12
σ^12
r^13

− 6
σ^6
r^7

)
(9.7-9)

c.Show thatFr0ifr 21 /^6 σ.

In a liquid or solid the average separation of the molecules from their nearest neigh-
bors is approximately equal to the intermolecular distance at the minimum inu. Energy
is required either to compress a liquid or solid or to pull its molecules away from each
other, which results in a nearly constant volume. In a gas at ordinary pressures, the
average nearest-neighbor distance is roughly 10 times as great as in a liquid, and the
average intermolecular forces are relatively small.
A simpler but less realistic representation of the pair potential function is thesquare
well potential

u(r)




∞ (0<r<d)
−u 0 (d<r<c)
0(r>c)

(9.7-10)

This representation is shown in Figure 9.16. If optimum values ofdandcare chosen,
this function can approximate the actual intermolecular potential for some purposes.

u

r = dr = c
r

0

2 u 0


`

Figure 9.16 The Square-Well Repre-
sentation of the Intermolecular Poten-
tial of a Pair of Atoms.

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