10.2 Transport Processes 451
2 1.5 2 1.0 2 0.5 0 0.5 1.0 1.5
Concentration
z/cm
t 5 4 hours
t 5 2 hours
t 5 1 hour
Figure 10.4 Concentration as a Function of Position in a Diffusing System with an
Initial Thin Layer of Solute, as in Eq. (10.2-16).
Since all of the molecules of substance 2 started out atz0, we can use Eq. (10.2-16)
to study their average displacement in thezdirection. Consider a thin slab of the system
lying betweenz′andz′+dz, wherez′is some value ofz. The fraction of the molecules
of substance 2 in the slab at timetis
(fraction in slab)
c 2
(
z′,t
)
dz
∫∞
−∞
c 2 (z,t)dz
c 2
(
z′,t
)
dz
n 0
(10.2-17)
The mean value of the coordinatezat timetis given by
〈z(t)〉
1
n 0
∫∞
−∞
zc 2 (z,t)dz 0
1
n 0
n 0
2
√
πD 2 t
∫∞
−∞
ze−z
(^2) / 4 D 2 t
dz 0 (10.2-18)
The mean value〈z(t)〉vanishes because the integrand is anodd function.Iff(x)isan
odd function, thenf(−x)−f(x). The fact that〈z(t)〉0 corresponds to the fact
that for every molecule that has moved in the positivezdirection, another has moved
the same distance in the negativezdirection.
Theroot-mean-square valueof thezcoordinate is a measure of the magnitude of
the distance traveled in thezdirection by an average molecule. The root-mean-square
value is the square root of themean-square value,
〈
z^2
〉
:
zrms
〈
z^2
〉 1 / 2
[
1
n 0
∫∞
−∞
z^2 c 2 (z,t)dz
] 1 / 2
[
1
n 0
n 0
2
√
πD 2 t
∫∞
−∞
z^2 e−z
(^2) / 4 D 2 t
dz
] 1 / 2
zrms[ 2 D 2 t]^1 /^2 (10.2-19)
where we have looked up the integral in Appendix C. The root-mean-square displace-
ment is proportional to the square root of the elapsed time and to the square root of
the diffusion coefficient. This behavior is similar to that of arandom walk,^2 which is
(^2) L. E. Reichl,A Modern Course in Statistical Physics, University of Texas Press, Austin, 1980, p. 151ff.