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Topic: Chemical potential 2 components  (Read 3362 times)

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Offline orgo814

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Chemical potential 2 components
« on: July 04, 2015, 11:24:26 PM »
This attached question in my study book asks for the relationship between chemical potentials of two components in one phase at equilibrium.

We know that u1n1 + u2n2 = 0 so solving for u1 like the question asks I get option C. My book however says the answer is B. I can't figure out what I am missing here.

Offline mjc123

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Re: Chemical potential 2 components
« Reply #1 on: July 05, 2015, 06:26:36 PM »
Ever considered posting your pictures the right way up?

The answer is A. Species in equilibrium have the same chemical potential.
Quote
We know that u1n1 + u2n2 = 0
This is not true. At equilibrium, for a small change in composition μ1dn1 + μ2dn2 = 0

Offline orgo814

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Re: Chemical potential 2 components
« Reply #2 on: July 05, 2015, 09:16:23 PM »
The answer is B according to the ACS. And they are face up from my device so I'm not sure why you're seeing the picture from another point of view

Offline mjc123

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Re: Chemical potential 2 components
« Reply #3 on: July 06, 2015, 08:07:30 AM »
Does the book just say "B" or does it give some explanation? It might be just a typo - these mistakes do happen in textbooks. But it's definitely a mistake.

Offline orgo814

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Re: Chemical potential 2 components
« Reply #4 on: July 06, 2015, 12:31:21 PM »
No explanation just says B. Although I looked in Atkins textbook and response C seems to be the correct one not A. I'm open to hearing what you say though.

Apparently in deriving this expression the fact that G is a state function is used. I'm not sure how that applies here.

Offline mjc123

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Re: Chemical potential 2 components
« Reply #5 on: July 07, 2015, 07:08:07 AM »
I'm sure Atkins doesn't say that; are you reading him correctly?
G = n1μ1 + n2μ2
At equilibrium G is a minimum (not zero), (dG/dn1)n1+n2 = 0.
μ1dn1 + μ2dn2 + n11 + n22 = 0
From the Gibbs-Duhem equation (answer B to the previous question on your picture, whatever it was) Σnii = 0 at constant T,P; and dn2 = -dn1.
Hence μ1 - μ2 = 0
Chemical potential is an intensive property which is equal in substances in chemical equilibrium - there is no tendency for reaction to go in either direction because ΔG for a small deviation is zero. In this it is analogous to other "potential" quantities, e.g. temperature (which can be regarded as thermal potential) is the same in two bodies at thermal equilibrium, and heat won't flow between them; charge won't flow if there is no electric potential gradient, etc.

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