Physical Chemistry Third Edition

(C. Jardin) #1

130 3 The Second and Third Laws of Thermodynamics: Entropy


Removable partitions

V 1 V 2 V 3 Vc

Figure 3.10 A System for Carrying Out the Irreversible Mixing of Gases.

The Entropy Change of Mixing Ideal Gases


Theentropy change of mixingis the entropy change for producing a mixture from the
pure components. Consider a mixture of several ideal gases in whichn 1 is the amount
of substance 1,n 2 is the amount of substance 2, and so on. The number of substances
is denoted bys. We imagine an initial state with each substance confined in a separate
compartment of a container, as shown in Figure 3.10. We arrange the system so that
each gas is at the temperature and the pressure of the final mixture by letting

Vi

niRT
P

(i1, 2, 3,...,s) (3.3-13)

whereViis the volume of compartment numberi,niis the amount of substance number
iin compartment numberi, andTandPare the temperature and pressure of the final
mixture. The total volume of the container is denoted byV:

V

∑s

i 1

Vi (3.3-14)

The gases are mixed by withdrawing the partitions between compartments, so that
each gas mixes irreversibly with the others and fills the entire volume. According to
Dalton’s law of partial pressures each gas in a mixture of ideal gases acts as though it
were alone in the container. Gas numberiundergoes a process with the same initial
and final states as an isothermal reversible expansion from volumeVito volumeV.
The entropy changes of the individual gases are given by Eq. (3.3-3):

∆SiniRln

(

V

Vi

)

(i1, 2, 3,...,s) (3.3-15)

The entropy change of the system is the sum of these quantities:

∆S

∑s

i 1

niRln

(

V

Vi

)

(3.3-16)

We now express∆Sin terms of the mole fractions. Themole fractionof substance
numberiis defined by

xi

ni
n

(definition of the mole fractionxi) (3.3-17)
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