Free Volume and Entropy in Condensed Systems I. General Principles. Fluctuation Entropy and Free Volume in Some Monatomic Crystals
- 1 November 1945
- journal article
- research article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 13 (11), 478-492
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1723983
Abstract
In a system of atoms whose motions are classically excited, the change in entropy in any isothermal process can be written R ln (Vf 2/Vf 1) per mole, one such term for each kind of atom in the system. The free volume Vf used in this expression is the effective volume accessible to the centers of gravity of the atoms, corrected for fluctuation effects. Corresponding expressions can be written for the classical (translational or rotational) part of the motions of polyatomic molecules in real liquids and solids. In solids the free volume can be written Vf = Nvf, where v is a box, or cage, volume accessible to one particle, and f, the fluctuation factor, has a numerical value which depends on the way in which the box is defined. R ln f is a contribution to the entropy of the system, and the name ``fluctuationentropy'' is proposed for it. The fluctuationentropy includes what has been called ``communal entropy'' as well as a term due to the temperature variability of cell sizes. The free volume in a monatomic crystal can be determined from thermodynamic data, one convenient relationship being P vap = (RT/Vf ) exp (— ΔH/RT). When this is applied to the data for the vapor pressures of the solids A, Kr, Xe, Mg,Zn, Cd, Hg, values of Vf are obtained which are about ½ percent of the volumes of the solids. The values of f found for these crystals support Rice's view that solids should display a rather large fluctuationentropy.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Statistical Theory of Liquids. IPhysical Review B, 1942
- Free Volumes and Free Angle Ratios of Molecules in LiquidsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1938
- The entropy of solutionTransactions of the Faraday Society, 1938
- The Theory of the Liquid StateThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1937
- Relations between the energy and entropy of solution and their significanceTransactions of the Faraday Society, 1937
- The Complete Equation of State of One, Two and Three-Dimensional Gases of Hard Elastic SpheresPhysical Review B, 1936
- Further considerations on the thermodynamics of chemical equilibria and reaction ratesTransactions of the Faraday Society, 1936
- The Symmetry of Time in PhysicsScience, 1930
- SOLUBILITY. XII. REGULAR SOLUTIONS1Journal of the American Chemical Society, 1929
- Zur kinetischen Theorie der einatomigen KörperAnnalen der Physik, 1903