Physics, asked by bapichowdhury4805, 11 months ago

How gibbs free energy change with chemical potential?

Answers

Answered by BrainlyGod
0
Hi friend here is your answer

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When both temperature and pressure are held constant, chemical potential is the partial molar Gibbs free energy.

When temperature and pressure changes, potential changes so, free energy changes.

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Answered by gabottpcilcd
0

hemical potential of a species is a form of energy that can be absorbed or released during a chemical reaction or phase transition due to a change of the particle number of the given species. The chemical potential of a species in a mixture is defined as the rate of change of a free energy of a thermodynamic system with respect to the change in the number of atoms or molecules of the species that are added to the system. Thus, it is the partial derivative of the free energy with respect to the amount of the species, all other species' concentrations in the mixture remaining constant. The molar chemical potential is also known as partial molar free energy[1]. When both temperature and pressure are held constant, chemical potential is the partial molar Gibbs free energy. At chemical equilibrium or in phase equilibrium the total sum of the product of chemical potentials and stoichiometric coefficients is zero, as the free energy is at a minimum.

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