Definition and Basic Concept

Thermodynamic Definition

Chemical potential (μ): partial molar Gibbs free energy of a species in a system. Represents the change in system free energy with respect to change in number of moles of that species at constant temperature, pressure, and composition of other components.

Physical Interpretation

Driving force for mass transfer, phase changes, and chemical reactions. Indicates tendency of species to escape or enter a phase.

Historical Background

Introduced by Josiah Willard Gibbs (1870s). Central to modern thermodynamics and physical chemistry.

Thermodynamic Formulation

Mathematical Expression

Chemical potential defined as partial derivative:

μ_i = (∂G/∂n_i)_{T,P,n_{j≠i}}

Relation to Thermodynamic Potentials

μ_i can be expressed from Helmholtz free energy (A), internal energy (U), enthalpy (H), and Gibbs free energy (G) depending on natural variables.

Intensive Property

Chemical potential is intensive; independent of system size.

Relation to Gibbs Free Energy

Expression for Multicomponent Systems

Gibbs free energy is sum over species:

G = ∑ n_i μ_i

Implications for Equilibrium

At equilibrium, μ_i equalizes across phases; minimizes G.

Thermodynamic Stability

Negative gradient of chemical potential drives spontaneous processes.

Chemical Potential in Multicomponent Systems

Dependence on Composition

μ_i depends on mole fractions, activities, or concentrations of all species.

Interaction Effects

Non-ideal behavior modifies μ_i via activity coefficients.

Mathematical Formulation

For component i:

μ_i = μ_i^° + RT ln a_i

where μ_i^° is standard chemical potential, a_i activity.

Role in Phase Equilibria

Equality of Chemical Potentials

Condition for phase equilibrium: μ_i^α = μ_i^β for phases α and β.

Clapeyron and Phase Diagrams

μ governs phase boundaries, coexistence lines.

Example: Vapor-Liquid Equilibrium

μ_vapor = μ_liquid defines saturation pressure and composition.

Chemical Potential and Reaction Equilibria

Reaction Gibbs Energy

Δ_rG expressed in terms of chemical potentials:

Δ_rG = ∑ ν_i μ_i

Equilibrium Constant

At equilibrium, Δ_rG = 0 implies:

K = exp(-Δ_rG° / RT)

Driving Force for Reactions

Difference in μ_i determines spontaneity and direction.

Partial Molar Quantities

Definition

Partial molar quantity: change in extensive property with mole number of component i.

Chemical Potential as Partial Molar Gibbs Energy

μ_i = partial molar Gibbs free energy = (∂G/∂n_i)_{T,P,n_j}

Other Partial Molar Properties

Volume, enthalpy, entropy can also be partial molar quantities.

PropertyPartial Molar Quantity
Gibbs Free EnergyChemical Potential (μ_i)
VolumePartial Molar Volume (V̄_i)
EnthalpyPartial Molar Enthalpy (H̄_i)

Activity and Fugacity

Non-ideal Systems

Chemical potential corrected by activity (a_i) or fugacity (f_i) to account for deviations from ideality.

Definitions

Activity: effective concentration; Fugacity: corrected pressure-like term for gases.

Expression of μ with Fugacity

μ_i = μ_i^° + RT ln f_i

Measurement and Calculation Methods

Experimental Techniques

Electrochemical cells, vapor pressure measurements, calorimetry.

Computational Methods

Statistical mechanics, molecular simulations, equation of state models.

Standard States and Reference Conditions

Choice of μ_i^° impacts calculated chemical potentials; standard states defined per substance and phase.

Applications in Physical Chemistry

Phase Diagram Construction

Determination of phase boundaries by equating μ_i across phases.

Chemical Reaction Engineering

Prediction of reaction direction, extent, and equilibrium composition.

Materials Science

Diffusion, segregation, stability of alloys governed by gradients in μ.

Limitations and Extensions

Ideal vs Non-ideal Systems

Ideal solution approximations fail for strong interactions, requiring activity models.

Electrochemical Potentials

In charged systems, electrochemical potential includes electric potential term.

Extensions to Biological Systems

Chemical potential applied to biomolecules, membranes, and cellular compartments.

Summary

Chemical potential is the fundamental intensive thermodynamic quantity driving mass transfer, phase changes, and chemical reactions. Defined as partial molar Gibbs free energy, it governs equilibria in multicomponent systems. Corrections for non-idealities via activity and fugacity are critical for accurate description. Applications span physical chemistry, materials science, and biochemistry.

References

  • Gibbs, J. W., “On the Equilibrium of Heterogeneous Substances,” Transactions of the Connecticut Academy, vol. 3, 1876, pp. 343-524.
  • Atkins, P., de Paula, J., “Physical Chemistry,” 11th ed., Oxford University Press, 2018, pp. 250-280.
  • Denbigh, K. G., “The Principles of Chemical Equilibrium,” 4th ed., Cambridge University Press, 1981, pp. 130-165.
  • Prausnitz, J. M., Lichtenthaler, R. N., de Azevedo, E. G., “Molecular Thermodynamics of Fluid-Phase Equilibria,” 3rd ed., Prentice Hall, 1999, pp. 75-120.
  • Smith, J. M., Van Ness, H. C., Abbott, M. M., “Introduction to Chemical Engineering Thermodynamics,” 7th ed., McGraw-Hill, 2005, pp. 210-245.