Effects of chemical interactions
- Related Topics:
- liquid crystal
- solution
- turbidity
- absorption
- coalescence
In many cases the properties of a mixture are determined primarily by forces that are more properly classified as chemical rather than as physical. For example, when dinitrogen pentoxide is dissolved in water, a new substance, nitric acid, is formed; and it is necessary to interpret the behaviour of such a solution in terms of its chemical properties, which, in this case, are more important than its physical properties. This example is an extreme one, and there are many solutions for which the chemical effect is less severe but nevertheless dominant.
Hydrogen bonding: association
This dominance is especially important in those solutions that involve hydrogen bonding. Whenever a solution contains molecules with an electropositive hydrogen atom and with an electronegative atom (such as nitrogen, oxygen, sulfur, or fluorine), hydrogen bonding may occur and, when it does, the properties of the solution are affected profoundly. Hydrogen bonds may form between identical molecules or between dissimilar molecules; for example, methanol (CH3OH) has an electropositive (electron-attracting) hydrogen atom and also an electronegative (electron-donating) oxygen atom, and therefore two methanol molecules may hydrogen-bond (represented by the dashed line) singly to form the structureor in chains to formHydrogen bonding between identical molecules is often called association.
Hydrogen bonding: solvation
In a mixture of methanol and, say, pyridine (C5H5N), hydrogen bonds can also form between the electropositive hydrogen atom in methanol and the electronegative nitrogen atom in pyridine. Hydrogen bonding between dissimilar molecules is an example of a type of interaction known as solvation. Since the extent of association or solvation or both depends on the concentrations of the solution’s components, the partial pressure of a component is not even approximately proportional to its mole fraction as given by Raoult’s law; therefore, large deviations from Raoult’s law are commonly observed in solutions in which hydrogen bonding is extensive. Broadly speaking, association of one component, but not the other, tends to produce positive deviations from Raoult’s law, because the associating component hydrogen-bonds to a smaller extent when it is surrounded by other molecules than it does in the pure state. On the other hand, solvation between dissimilar molecules tends to produce negative deviations from Raoult’s law.
Theories of solutions
Activity coefficients and excess functions
As has been explained previously, when actual concentrations do not give simple linear relations for the behaviour of a solution, activity coefficients, symbolized by γi, are used in expressing deviations from Raoult’s law. Activity coefficients are directly related to excess functions, and, in attempting to understand solution behaviour, it is convenient to characterize nonelectrolyte solutions in terms of these functions. In particular, it is useful to distinguish between two types of limiting behaviour: one corresponds to that of a regular solution; the other, to that of an athermal solution (i.e., when components are mixed, no heat is generated or absorbed).
In a binary mixture with mole fractions x1 and x2 and activity coefficients γ1 and γ2, these quantities can be related to a thermodynamic function designated by GE, called the excess Gibbs (or free) energy. The significance of the word excess lies in the fact that GE is the Gibbs energy of a solution in excess of what it would be if it were ideal.
In a binary solution the two activity coefficients are not independent but are related by an exact differential equation called the Gibbs-Duhem relation. If experimental data at constant temperature are available for γ1 and γ2 as a function of composition, it is possible to apply this equation to check the data for thermodynamic consistency: the data are said to be consistent only if they satisfy the Gibbs-Duhem relation. Experimental data that do not satisfy this relation are thermodynamically inconsistent and therefore must be erroneous.
To establish a theory of solutions, it is necessary to construct a theoretical (or semitheoretical) equation for the excess Gibbs energy as a function of absolute temperature (T ) and the mole fractions x1 and x2. After such an equation has been established, the individual activity coefficients can readily be calculated.
Gibbs energy, by definition, consists of two parts: one part is the enthalpy, which reflects the intermolecular forces between the molecules, which, in turn, are responsible for the heat effects that accompany the mixing process (enthalpy is, in a general sense, a measure of the heat content of a substance); and the other part is the entropy, which reflects the state of disorder (a measure of the random behaviour of particles) in the mixture. The excess Gibbs energy GE is given by the equationwhere HE is the excess enthalpy and SE is the excess entropy. The word excess means in excess of that which would prevail if the solution were ideal. In the simplest case, both HE and SE are zero; in that case the solution is ideal and γ1 = γ2 = 1. In the general case, neither HE nor SE is zero, but two types of semi-ideal solutions can be designated: in the first, SE is zero but HE is not; this is called a regular solution. In the second, HE is zero but SE is not; this is called an athermal solution. An ideal solution is both regular and athermal.