The chemical potential is particularly important when studying systems of reacting particles. Consider the simplest case of two species, where a particle of species 1 can transform into a particle of species 2 and vice versa. An example of such a system is a supersaturated mixture of water liquid (species 1) and water vapor (species 2). In equilibrium, the chemical potentials of the two species must be equal, because any increase in one chemical potential would allow particles of that species to transform into the other species with the net emission of heat (see second law of thermodynamics.) In chemical reactions, the equilibrium conditions are generally more complicated because more than two species are involved. In this case, the relation between the chemical potentials at equilibrium is given by the law of mass action[?].
Since the chemical potential is a thermodynamic quantity, it is defined independently of the microscopic behavior of the system, i.e. the properties of the constituent particles. However, some systems contain important variables that are equivalent to the chemical potential. In Fermi gases and Fermi liquids[?], the chemical potential at zero temperature is equivalent to the Fermi energy. In electronic systems, the chemical potential is equivalent to the negative of the electrical potential. For systems containing particles which can be spontaneously created or destroyed, such as photons and phonons, the chemical potential is identically zero.
Consider a thermodynamic system containing n constituent species. Its total energy E is postulated to be a function of the entropy S, the volume V, and the number of particles of each species N1,..., Nn:
The chemical potential of the j-th species, μj is defined as the partial derivative
where the subscripts simply emphasize that the entropy, volume, and the other particle numbers are to be kept constant.
In real systems, it is usually difficult to hold the entropy fixed, since this involves good thermal insulation. It is therefore more convenient to use the Helmholtz free energy F, which is a function of the temperature T, volume, and particle numbers:
In terms of the Helmholtz free energy, the chemical potential is
See also:
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