27.1 The Canonical Ensemble 1127
where we now denote a molecule state by the single indexk. This molecular partition
function is the same as the molecular partition function defined in Chapter 25.
For a monatomic gas without electronic excitation Eq. (25.3-18) gives the formula
for the molecular partition function:
zztr
(
2 πm
h^2 β
) 3 / 2
V (27.1-29)
From Eq. (27.1-22), the ensemble average pressure of a monatomic dilute gas is
〈P〉
1
β
(
∂ln(Z)
∂V
)
β,N
N
β
(
∂ln(z)
∂V
)
β,N
N
β
dln(V)
dV
N
βV
(27.1-30)
We assume that our dilute gas obeys the ideal gas equation of state so that
〈P〉
nRT
V
NkBT
V
(27.1-31)
wherekBis Boltzmann’s constant, equal to 1. 3807 × 10 −^23 JK−^1 , and whereTis the
absolute temperature. This requires that
β
1
kBT
(27.1-32)
The molecular partition function of a dilute monatomic gas without electron excitation
becomes the same function as in Eq. (25.3-21):
zztr
(
2 πmkBT
h^2
) 3 / 2
V (dilute monatomic gas) (27.1-33)
The canonical probability distribution becomes
pi
1
Z
e−Ei/kBT (27.1-34)
and the canonical partition function becomes
Z
∑
i
e−Ei/kBT (27.1-35)
Although we have established only thatβ 1 /(kBT) for a dilute gas, we assert that
βcannot have a different meaning for different systems and that Eqs. (27.1-34) and
(27.1-35) are valid for any kind of a system.
Since the probability of any system microstate is proportional toe−Ei/kBT, the
canonical partition function is a measure of the total number of system microstates
effectively available to the system, relative to a probability of 1 for a state of zero
energy. The canonical partition function has a very large value for a macroscopic
system.
EXAMPLE27.1
Estimate the natural logarithm of the canonical partition function for 1.000 mol of helium gas
in a volume of 25.0 L at 298.15 K.