"Excuse me sir, did you know you were driving at 100 miles per hour?"
"That's impossible, officer, I haven't been driving for an hour."
ΔG
f is the heat of formation
per mole; it is equal to the heat of formation of 1 mole, but you don't have to be working with 1 mole for it to be meaningful. It may, for example, be derived from DSC measurements on < 1 mmol.
Consider the case when you have, say, a million litres of 1M solution of A, and you add an extra mole of A made from its elements (B and C):
1000000 A (aq) + B + C
1000001 A (aq); ΔG = 100 kJ
The change in concentration of A is negligible, we can regard it as effectively constant at 1M.
ΔG for this reaction is equal to ΔG
f° for A (aq) = 100 kJ/mol
Now suppose you scale it down, you have 1 L and you add 1 μmol A. ΔG for this will be 100 mJ. μ° = (dG/dn)° = 100 mJ/1 μmol = 100 kJ/mol = ΔG
f°
But chemical potential is also a function of composition that is NOT linear
Remember your original question was about ΔG
r°. You asked whether ΔG
f°(i) = μ°(i)
μ°(i) does not change with composition because it is a constant, defined by the definition of the standard state.