Second virial coefficient: Difference between revisions
Carl McBride (talk | contribs) m (→Hard spheres: Added an internal link.) |
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of the integral is the [[Mayer f-function]]. | of the integral is the [[Mayer f-function]]. | ||
==Isihara-Hadwiger formula== | ==Isihara-Hadwiger formula== | ||
The Isihara-Hadwiger formula was discovered simultaneously and independently by Isihara and the Swiss mathematician Hadwiger in 1950. | The Isihara-Hadwiger formula was discovered simultaneously and independently by Isihara | ||
<ref>[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1747510 Akira Isihara "Determination of Molecular Shape by Osmotic Measurement", Journal of Chemical Physics '''18''' pp. 1446-1449 (1950)]</ref> | |||
<ref>[http://dx.doi.org/10.1143/JPSJ.6.40 Akira Isihara and Tsuyoshi Hayashida "Theory of High Polymer Solutions. I. Second Virial Coefficient for Rigid Ovaloids Model", Journal of the Physical Society of Japan '''6''' pp. 40-45 (1951)]</ref> | |||
<ref>[http://dx.doi.org/10.1143/JPSJ.6.46 Akira Isihara and Tsuyoshi Hayashida "Theory of High Polymer Solutions. II. Special Forms of Second Osmotic Coefficient", Journal of the Physical Society of Japan '''6''' pp. 46-50 (1951)]</ref> | |||
and the Swiss mathematician Hadwiger in 1950 | |||
<ref>H. Hadwiger "Einige Anwendungen eines Funkticnalsatzes fur konvexe Körper in der räumichen Integralgeometrie" Mh. Math. '''54''' pp. 345- (1950)</ref> | |||
<ref>H. Hadwiger "" Experimentia '''7''' pp. 395- (1951)</ref> | |||
<ref>H. Hadwiger "Altes und Neues über Konvexe Körper" Birkäuser Verlag (1955)</ref> | |||
The second virial coefficient for any hard convex body is given by the exact relation | The second virial coefficient for any hard convex body is given by the exact relation | ||
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where <math>V</math> is | where <math>V</math> is | ||
the volume, <math>S</math>, the surface area, and <math>R</math> the mean radius of curvature. | the volume, <math>S</math>, the surface area, and <math>R</math> the mean radius of curvature. | ||
== | ==Hard spheres== | ||
For the [[hard sphere model]] one has <ref>Donald A. McQuarrie "Statistical Mechanics", University Science Books (2000) ISBN 978-1-891389-15-3 Eq. 12-40</ref> | |||
:<math>B_{2}(T)= - \frac{1}{2} \int_0^\sigma \left(\langle 0\rangle -1 \right) 4 \pi r^2 dr | :<math>B_{2}(T)= - \frac{1}{2} \int_0^\sigma \left(\langle 0\rangle -1 \right) 4 \pi r^2 dr | ||
</math> | </math> | ||
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Note that <math>B_{2}</math> for the hard sphere is independent of [[temperature]]. See also: [[Hard sphere: virial coefficients]]. | Note that <math>B_{2}</math> for the hard sphere is independent of [[temperature]]. See also: [[Hard sphere: virial coefficients]]. | ||
==Van der Waals equation of state== | |||
For the [[Van der Waals equation of state]] one has: | |||
:<math>B_{2}(T)= b -\frac{a}{RT} </math> | |||
For the derivation [[Van der Waals equation of state#Virial form | click here]]. | |||
==Excluded volume== | ==Excluded volume== | ||
The second virial coefficient can be computed from the expression | The second virial coefficient can be computed from the expression | ||
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*[[Joule-Thomson effect#Joule-Thomson coefficient | Joule-Thomson coefficient]] | *[[Joule-Thomson effect#Joule-Thomson coefficient | Joule-Thomson coefficient]] | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | |||
'''Related reading''' | |||
*[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1750922 W. H. Stockmayer "Second Virial Coefficients of Polar Gases", Journal of Chemical Physics '''9''' pp. 398- (1941)] | |||
*[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.481106 G. A. Vliegenthart and H. N. W. Lekkerkerker "Predicting the gas–liquid critical point from the second virial coefficient", Journal of Chemical Physics '''112''' pp. 5364-5369 (2000)] | |||
[[Category: Virial coefficients]] | [[Category: Virial coefficients]] |
Revision as of 16:28, 7 October 2010
The second virial coefficient is usually written as B or as . The second virial coefficient represents the initial departure from ideal-gas behavior. The second virial coefficient, in three dimensions, is given by
where is the intermolecular pair potential, T is the temperature and is the Boltzmann constant. Notice that the expression within the parenthesis of the integral is the Mayer f-function.
Isihara-Hadwiger formula
The Isihara-Hadwiger formula was discovered simultaneously and independently by Isihara [1] [2] [3] and the Swiss mathematician Hadwiger in 1950 [4] [5] [6] The second virial coefficient for any hard convex body is given by the exact relation
or
where
where is the volume, , the surface area, and the mean radius of curvature.
Hard spheres
For the hard sphere model one has [7]
leading to
Note that for the hard sphere is independent of temperature. See also: Hard sphere: virial coefficients.
Van der Waals equation of state
For the Van der Waals equation of state one has:
For the derivation click here.
Excluded volume
The second virial coefficient can be computed from the expression
where is the excluded volume.
See also
References
- ↑ Akira Isihara "Determination of Molecular Shape by Osmotic Measurement", Journal of Chemical Physics 18 pp. 1446-1449 (1950)
- ↑ Akira Isihara and Tsuyoshi Hayashida "Theory of High Polymer Solutions. I. Second Virial Coefficient for Rigid Ovaloids Model", Journal of the Physical Society of Japan 6 pp. 40-45 (1951)
- ↑ Akira Isihara and Tsuyoshi Hayashida "Theory of High Polymer Solutions. II. Special Forms of Second Osmotic Coefficient", Journal of the Physical Society of Japan 6 pp. 46-50 (1951)
- ↑ H. Hadwiger "Einige Anwendungen eines Funkticnalsatzes fur konvexe Körper in der räumichen Integralgeometrie" Mh. Math. 54 pp. 345- (1950)
- ↑ H. Hadwiger "" Experimentia 7 pp. 395- (1951)
- ↑ H. Hadwiger "Altes und Neues über Konvexe Körper" Birkäuser Verlag (1955)
- ↑ Donald A. McQuarrie "Statistical Mechanics", University Science Books (2000) ISBN 978-1-891389-15-3 Eq. 12-40
Related reading