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IDEAL SOLUTIONS, FUGACITY, ACTIVITY, AND STANDARD STATES

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Title: IDEAL SOLUTIONS, FUGACITY, ACTIVITY, AND STANDARD STATES


1
TOPIC 3
  • IDEAL SOLUTIONS, FUGACITY, ACTIVITY, AND STANDARD
    STATES

2
I. PARTIAL AND APPARENT MOLAR PROPERTIES
3
MOLAR VS. PARTIAL MOLAR QUANTITIES
  • Molar values of state functions are defined as
    follows
  • etc. These are useful only in the case of
    single-component systems and dependent only on
    pressure and temperature, not composition.
  • Partial molar quantities are defined according
    to
  • These are dependent on T, P, and composition.

4
PHYSICAL INTERPRETATION OF PARTIAL MOLAR VOLUMES
  • The partial molar volume of component i in a
    system is equal to the infinitesimal increase or
    decrease in the volume, divided by the
    infinitesimal number of moles of the substance
    which is added, while maintaining T, P and
    quantities of all other components constant.
  • Another way to visualize this is to think of the
    change in volume on adding a small amount of
    component i to an infinite total volume of the
    system.
  • Note partial molar quantities can be positive or
    negative!

5
SUMMING PARTIAL MOLAR QUANTITIES
  • The total value for a state function of a system
    is obtained by summing the partial molar volumes
    of its components according to
  • We can manipulate partial molar quantities in a
    manner identical to the way we manipulate total
    quantities.
  • As with total state functions, we cannot know
    absolute values, only differences (except for V
    and S)!

6
  • We can also express the summations in terms of
    molar state functions and mole fractions
  • In the case of the volume of a two-component
    system, e.g., NaCl-H2O, we can write

7
Schematic plot of the molar volume of aqueous
NaCl solutions as a function of mole fraction of
NaCl.
8
HOW TO DETERMINE PARTIAL MOLAR VOLUME
  • Refer to the previous diagram. Triangles A and B
    are similar, so it is true that

but
so
comparison with
shows that
So the partial molar volumes can be determined
from the intercepts of a line tangent to the plot
of volume vs. mole fraction.
9
PARTIAL MOLAR FREE ENERGY -THE CHEMICAL POTENTIAL
Chemical potential
  • The previous relationships also apply

It can also be shown that
10
Schematic plot of chemical potential vs. mole
fraction for a binary system
11
COMPOSITIONAL CHANGES
  • The Master equations that we developed previously
    for one-component systems can now be written as

12
AN ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENT FOR EQUILIBRIUM
  • Consider a system with components i, j, k, l,
    distributed among phases ?, ?, ?, ?,
  • At equilibrium it must be true that
  • ?i? ?i? ?i? ?i?
  • ?j? ?j? ?j? ?j? ...
  • ?k? ?k? ?k? ?k? ...
  • ?l? ?l? ?l? ?l? ...
  • etc.

13
  • Chemical potentials represent the slope of the
    Gibbs free energy surface in compositional space.
    Thus, a component will move from a phase in which
    it has a high chemical potential, to one in which
    it has a low chemical potential, until its
    chemical potential in all phases is the same.
  • Specific example Consider a silicate melt in
    equilibrium with forsterite (Mg2SiO4), and
    enstatite (Mg2Si2O6). At equilibrium the
    following must be true
  • ? Mgmelt ?MgFo ?MgEn
  • ?Simelt ?SiFo ?SiEn
  • ?Omelt ?OFo ?OEn

14
GIBBS-DUHEM EQUATION
  • For a homogenous phase of two components, A and
    B, the Master Equation becomes
  • If we now specify equilibrium at constant T and P
  • Now, we have shown above that
  • Differentiating this we obtain

15
GIBBS-DUHEM EQUATION - CONTINUED
  • At equilibrium
  • Substituting the previous expression
  • we obtain
  • In the general case we get the Gibbs-Duhem
    equation

16
GIBBS-DUHEM EQUATION - CONTINUED
  • Starting with the expression
  • If we divide through both sides by dXA we get
  • And now dividing by nA nB we get

17
APPARENT MOLAR QUANTITIES
  • Although in principle, partial molar quantities
    can be measured from intercepts of lines tangent
    to a plot of state functions vs. mole fraction as
    outlined previously, they are not determined this
    way in practice.
  • In practice, apparent molar quantities are
    determined. For a state function like volume, the
    apparent molar volume, ?V, is given by
  • ?V (V - n1V1)/n2
  • where n1, and n2 are the number of moles of
    solvent and solute, respectively, and V1 is the
    molar volume of pure solvent.

18
Total volume of a solution as a function of
solute concentration. Illustrates the difference
between partial and apparent molar volume.
19
  • The apparent molar volume is the volume that
    would be attributed to one mole of solute in
    solution if it is assumed that the solvent
    contributes the same volume it has in the pure
    state.
  • Starting with the definition of apparent molar
    volume
  • ?V (V - n1V1)/n2
  • we can rearrange to get
  • V n1V1 n2 ?V
  • and dividing by (n1 n2),
  • V X1V1 X2 ?V
  • Thus, the volume of solution can be calculated
    knowing ?V instead of the partial molar volume.

20
Comparison of apparent molar and partial molar
volumes
21
PARTIAL MOLAR VOLUMES FROM APPARENT MOLAR VOLUMES
or
  • If ?V measurements are fit by an equation of the
    type ?V a bm cm2
  • then we have V2 m(b 2cm) a bm cm2 or
  • V2 a 2bm 3cm2

22
II. IDEAL SOLUTIONS
23
THERMODYNAMICS OF IDEAL SOLUTIONS
  • An ideal solution is one that satisfies the
    following equation ?i - ?i RT ln Xi
  • where ?i is the chemical potential of some
    component i in a solution and ?i is the chemical
    potential of that component in the pure form.
  • Recall that
  • substituting we get

24
  • These equations tell us that the free energy of
    an ideal solution is the sum of two terms the
    free energy of a mechanical mixture, and a free
    energy of ideal mixing.

25
ENTHALPY AND VOLUME OF AN IDEAL SOLUTION
If i is a pure substance.
  • There is no volume or enthalpy change upon ideal
    mixing. In other words

However, there is a change in entropy upon ideal
mixing. Because the solution is more disordered,
entropy increases!
26
ENTROPY OF MIXING
  • but we have ?Gideal mix ?Hideal mix -T?Sideal
    mix
  • and ?Hideal mix 0
  • so

Thus, the only contribution to ?Gideal mix is an
entropy contribution!
27
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30
III. FUGACITY AND ACTIVITY
31
FUGACITY
  • Starting with dG VdP - SdT
  • at constant T this becomes dG VdP
  • For an ideal gas dG (RT/P)dP RT dln P
  • This is true for ideal gases only, but it would
    be nice to have a similar form for real fluids.
  • dG RT dln ? where ? is the fugacity
  • ? ?/P ? 1 as P ? 0
  • ? is the fugacity coefficient
  • ? ?P
  • Fugacity may be thought of as a thermodynamic
    pressure it has units of pressure.

32
MEASUREMENT OF FUGACITY
33
Alternatively, we can begin again with
But we now define the compressibility factor Z
34
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35
  • The above equation is the basis of the
    experimental determination of fugacities from
    P-V-T data.
  • We can substitute into the integral (Z-1)/P
    calculated from any equation of state, or we can
    integrate graphically.

36
CALCULATION OF EQUILIBRIUM BOUNDARIES INVOLVING
FLUIDS
  • A number of mineral reactions involve only solid
    minerals and either H2O or CO2, e.g.
  • KAl3Si3O10(OH)2 ? KAlSi3O8 Al2O3 H2O
  • or
  • CaCO3 SiO2 ? CaSiO3 CO2
  • or in general
  • A(s) ? B(s) C(fluid)
  • ?rV VB VC - VA (VB - VA) VC
  • ?rV ?sV Vfluid

37
  • The pressure integral for the solids is then
    evaluated using the constant ?sV approximation
    and that for the fluid is evaluated using
    fugacities.

For the muscovite breakdown reaction above, we
can start with the equation
38
  • ?rV VKspar Vcor VH2O - Vmusc
  • ?rV (VKspar Vcor - Vmusc) VH2O
  • ?rV ?sV VH2O

A function of pressure and temperature!
39
FUGACITIES IN GASEOUS SOLUTIONS
  • Starting with the following, in terms of partial
    molar volumes

We obtain the expression for the fugacity
coefficient of a component in a solution
40
ALL CONSTITUENTS HAVE A FUGACITY
  • The expression dG RT dln ?
  • may be integrated between two states 1 and 2 to
    give
  • G2 - G1 RT ln (?2/?1)
  • This equation applies to a pure one-component
    system. For a solution we must use chemical
    potentials and we write
  • ?i - ?i RT ln (?i/?i)
  • This equation makes no stipulation as to the
    state of component i, and can therefore refer to
    solid, liquid or gas.

41
  • Solids and liquids therefore are also associated
    with a fugacity. In some cases, this fugacity can
    be thought of as a vapor pressure. Fugacity can
    also be thought of as an escaping tendency.
  • However, in some cases, a vapor phase may not
    exist, but a fugacity always exists. One must
    realize that the fugacity is a thermodynamic
    model parameter, not always an approximation to a
    real pressure.
  • Fugacities of solid phases or individual
    components of solid solutions are not generally
    known.
  • Fugacities are absolute physical properties.

42
ACTIVITIES
  • The absolute values of the fugacities of solids
    and liquids cannot always be determined, but
    their ratios can be.
  • Consider ?i - ?i RT ln (?i/?i)
  • If we let one of these states be a reference
    state, this can be rewritten
  • ?i - ?i RT ln (?i/?i)
  • We now define the activity of constituent i to be
  • ai ?i/?i
  • Thus
  • ?i - ?i RT ln ai

43
DALTONS LAW
  • Dalton (1811) discovered that, at low total
    pressures, a mixture of gases exerts a pressure
    equal to the sum of the pressures that each
    constituent gas would exert if each alone
    occupied the same volume.
  • Strictly true only for ideal gases, but is
    approximately true at low total pressure where
    real gases approach ideality. For each gas we
    have
  • P1V n1RT
  • P2V n2RT
  • etc.
  • For the gas mixture we have

44
  • If we divide the expression for each constituent
    by the expression for the mixture we obtain
  • etc.
  • or
  • P1 X1Ptotal
  • P2 X2Ptotal
  • etc.
  • Ptotal P1 P2 P3
  • P1, P2, etc. are called the partial pressures.

45
HENRYS LAW
  • Henry (1803) was studying the solubility of gases
    in liquids. He found that the amount of gas
    dissolved in a liquid in contact with it was
    directly proportional to the pressure on the gas,
    i.e.,
  • Pi Kh,iXi
  • Kh,i is a constant called the Henrys Law
    constant.
  • In practice, this law holds only at relatively
    low values of Pi.

46
RAOULTS LAW
  • Raoult (1887) studied vapor-liquid systems in
    which two or more liquid components were mixed in
    known proportions and the liquid was equilibrated
    with its own vapor. The composition of the vapor
    was then determined. The total vapor pressure of
    the system was low, so the vapor behaved ideally
    and conformed to Daltons law. In such systems,
    the partial pressures of the gaseous components
    were found to be a linear function of the their
    mole fraction in the liquid.

47
  • Thus, for a binary system A-B, he obtained
  • PA XAPAº and PB XBPBº
  • where PAº and PBº are the vapor pressures of pure
    components A and B, respectively.

48
  • The only way that such a simple relationship as
    Raoults law can hold is if the intermolecular
    forces between A-A, B-B, and A-B are identical.
    Solutions in which this is the case are called
    ideal solutions.
  • The most general way of expressing Raoults Law
    is
  • Pi XiPiº
  • Very few systems follow Raoults Law over the
    entire range of composition from Xi 0 to Xi
    1. However, Raoults Law often applies to the
    solvent in dilute solutions, whereas the solute
    in dilute solutions follows Henrys Law.

49
Partial pressure in the mixture
acetone-chloroform at 35.2C. This mixture
exhibits negative deviations from Raoults Law
50
Partial pressure in the mixture carbon
disulfide-acetone at 35.2C. This mixture
exhibits positive deviations from Raoults Law
51
THE GIBBS-DUHEM EQUATION REVISITED
  • Previously we derived the Gibbs-Duhem equation
    for a binary solution
  • This can be rearranged to give

52
  • This equation shows that the slopes of tangents
    to curves of chemical potential vs. mole fraction
    for binary solutions are not independent of one
    another.
  • For example, if XB 0, and
    has a finite
  • value, then .
  • If XA 0.5, then
    etc.

53
Chemical potentials in solutions of carbon
disulfide and acetone.
Gibbs-Duhem Equation
54
THE DUHEM-MARGULES EQUATION
  • Starting with the Gibbs-Duhem equation
  • If we recall that d?i RT dln ?i we can make
    the substitution and obtain

55
When the vapors are nearly perfect gases, we may
substitute partial pressures for fugacities to
obtain the approximate relation
Realizing that dXB -dXA, and that d ln P d
P/P we can rewrite this as
56
Application of the Duhem-Margules equation.
Partial pressure is plotted on the Y-axis.
Duhem-Margules Equation
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59
THE LEWIS FUGACITY RULE
  • This is a variation on Raoults Law
  • fimixture Xifipure
  • This states that the fugacity of a constituent in
    a mixture is equal to its mole fraction times
    its fugacity in the pure state.
  • Many substances that do not obey Raoults Law do
    in fact obey the Lewis Fugacity Rule.

60
IDEAL MIXING AND ACTIVITY
  • If we compare the definition of the activity
  • ai ?i/?i
  • and a rearrangement of the Lewis Fugacity Rule
  • Xi fimixture/fipure
  • we see that for solutions that obey the Lewis
    Fugacity Rule
  • ai Xi
  • We can also now write
  • ?i - ?i RT ln Xi
  • which is considered another form of Raoults Law.

61
Activity relations for an ideal binary system.
It turns out that these relations hold not only
for liquid and gaseous solutions, but also for
solid solutions.
62
NON-IDEAL MIXING
  • As already discussed, most real solutions do not
    conform to Raoults Law over the entire
    compositional range.
  • However, whether solid, liquid or gas, in many
    solutions, the component in excess (solvent)
    follows Raoults Law and the minor component
    (solute) follows Henrys Law over a limited range
    at low mole fractions.

63
Positive deviation from Raoults Law
64
ANOTHER NIFTY APPLICATION OF THE GIBBS-DUHEM
EQUATION
  • Task Prove that, if the solute in a binary
    solution obeys Henrys Law, then the solvent
    obeys Raoults Law.
  • Starting with the Gibbs-Duhem equation for a
    binary system
  • and dividing through both sides by nA nB we get
  • At low pressures we have d?i RT dln Pi

65
  • So we can now write
  • Now if component A is the solute and obeys
    Henrys Law we have PA Kh,AXA
  • Taking the natural logarithm of both sides we
    have
  • ln PA ln Kh,A ln XA
  • Now differentiating we get
  • d ln PA d ln XA
  • so now

66
  • Now -dXB dXA so
  • Now we integrate from XB 1 to XB XB
  • where PB is the partial pressure of B when XB
    1, i.e., the partial pressure of pure B.

Raoults Law!
67
ACTIVITY COEFFICIENTS
  • The ideal solution is useful as a model with
    which real solutions are compared.
  • This comparison is effected by taking the ratio
    of the activity of the real solution relative to
    that of the ideal solution. This ratio is called
    the activity coefficient.
  • Deviations from Raoults Law are expressed by the
    Raoultian activity coefficient ?R
  • ai ?R,iXi

68
  • Deviations from Henrys Law are expressed by the
    Henryian activity coefficient ?H
  • ai ?H,iXi
  • Activity coefficients, because they are ratios of
    activities, are unitless.
  • A major difference between the two types of
    activity coefficients is that
  • ?R ? 1 as X ? 1, but
  • ?H ? 1 as X ? 0
  • Thus, ?H is usually more useful for solutes in
    dilute solutions.

69
IV. STANDARD STATES
70
STANDARD STATES
  • Because the activity is the ratio of two
    fugacities, i.e.,
  • ai ?i/?i
  • the value of the activity depends on the
    reference state chosen for ?i. This state we
    usually refer to as the standard state.
  • The choice of the standard state is completely
    arbitrary.
  • The standard state need not be a real state. It
    is only necessary that we be able to calculate or
    measure the ratio of the fugacity of the
    constituent in the real state to that in the
    standard state.

71
A STANDARD STATE HAS FOUR ATTRIBUTES
  • Temperature
  • Pressure
  • Composition
  • A particular, well-defined state (e.g., ideal
    gas, ideal solution, solid, liquid, etc.)
  • If desirable, we can permit T or P to be
    variable, i.e., on a sliding scale.

72
STANDARD STATES FOR GASES
  • Single Ideal Gas
  • Starting with the relationship ?2 - ?1 RT ln
    (P2/P1)
  • we can assign our standard state to be the ideal
    gas at 1 bar and any temperature. In this case we
    can write ? - ? RT ln P
  • and ? - ? is the difference in chemical
    potential between an ideal gas at T and P, and an
    ideal gas at T and 1 bar.

73
  • Ideal mixture of ideal gases
  • For such a mixture we can write
  • ?1 - ?1 RT ln (X1P)/(X1P)
  • If we choose our standard state to be the pure
    ideal gas 1 at any temperature and 1 bar, then
    X1 1 and P 1, so ?1 - ?1 RT ln (X1P)
    RT ln P1
  • Non-ideal gases
  • For non-ideal gases we would write
  • ?1 - ?1 RT ln (f1/f1)
  • but recall that lim (fi/Pi)Pi?0 1. So if we
    chose our standard state to be the pure, ideal
    gas at any temperature and P 1 bar, we get

74
  • ?1 - ?1 RT ln f1
  • This equation is frequently written, but rarely
    understood. It only has meaning if the standard
    state is specified to be the pure ideal gas at
    any temperature and 1 bar.
  • This is the most commonly chosen standard state
    for gases and supercritical fluids. However,
    there is no reason why this particular standard
    state has to be chosen. We could just as easily
    choose 1) the pure ideal gas at any T and 10
    bars 2) a pure real gas at 25C and 1 bar 3) a
    specific mixture of gases at any T and ? bars or
    4) any other well-defined standard state.

75
LIQUIDS AND SOLIDS
  • The following equation applies to liquids and
    solids as well
  • ?i - ?i RT ln (fi/fi)
  • Fixed pressure standard state
  • The standard state is chosen to be the pure phase
    at the temperature of interest and 1 bar. Then
    fi 1, so ai fi. In this case, it is
    necessary to know fi at each and every set of P-T
    conditions of interest.
  • Variable pressure standard state
  • The standard state is the pure phase at the
    pressure and temperature of interest.

76
  • Under these conditions, fi fi, so ai 1. The
    only way the activity of a solid deviates from
    unity under this standard state is when the solid
    is not pure, but is a solid solution.
  • It may seem that the second standard state is
    easier to deal with in terms of pressure
    corrections. However, with the first standard
    state, the pressure correction is applied to fi,
    whereas in the second standard state, the
    correction is applied to ?i. In either case,
    volume data for the constituent are required to
    make the correction.

77
AQUEOUS SOLUTIONS
  • The activities of solutes in dilute solutions are
    more closely approximated with Henrys Law than
    Raoults Law. Thus, a somewhat different standard
    state is applied. We start with the equation
    expressing the difference in chemical potentials
    between two solutions with different molalities
  • ?i - ?i RT ln (?Hm/?Hm)
  • If we let one solution be the standard state, we
    can write
  • ?i - ?i RT ln (?Hm)/(?Hm)

78
  • We then define the standard state to be the
    hypothetically ideal one-molal solution at the
    temperature and pressure of interest. Under these
    conditions ?H 1 and m 1, so (?Hm) 1, and
    we write
  • ?i - ?i RT ln ?Hm
  • This somewhat strange standard state is
    necessary, because if we let the standard state
    be the infinitely dilute solution, we would have
    ?H 1 and m 0, so (?Hm) 0, which would
    result in an undefined value of
  • ?i - ?i RT ln (?Hm)/ (?Hm)
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