Electrons in solids Electrons in solids have a chemical potential, defined the same way as the chemical potential of a chemical species: The change in free energy when electrons are added or removed from the system. In the case of electrons, the chemical potential is usually expressed in energy per particle rather than energy per mole, and the energy per particle is conventionally given in units of
electronvolt (eV). Chemical potential plays an especially important role in
solid-state physics and is closely related to the concepts of
work function,
Fermi energy, and
Fermi level. For example,
n-type silicon has a higher internal chemical potential of electrons than
p-type silicon. In a
p–n junction diode at equilibrium the chemical potential (
internal chemical potential) varies from the p-type to the n-type side, while the
total chemical potential (electrochemical potential, or,
Fermi level) is constant throughout the diode. As described above, when describing chemical potential, one has to say "relative to what". In the case of electrons in semiconductors, internal chemical potential is often specified relative to some convenient point in the band structure, e.g., to the bottom of the conduction band. It may also be specified "relative to vacuum", to yield a quantity known as
work function, however, work function varies from surface to surface even on a completely homogeneous material. Total chemical potential, on the other hand, is usually specified relative to
electrical ground. In atomic physics, the chemical potential of the electrons in an atom is sometimes said to be the negative of the atom's
electronegativity. Likewise, the process of chemical potential equalization is sometimes referred to as the process of
electronegativity equalization. This connection comes from the
Mulliken electronegativity scale. By inserting the energetic definitions of the
ionization potential and
electron affinity into the Mulliken electronegativity, it is seen that the Mulliken chemical potential is a finite difference approximation of the electronic energy with respect to the number of electrons, i.e., : \mu_\text{Mulliken} = -\chi_\text{Mulliken} = -\frac{IP + EA}{2} = \left[\frac{\delta E[N]}{\delta N}\right]_{N=N_0}.
Sub-nuclear particles In recent years,
thermal physics has applied the definition of chemical potential to systems in
particle physics and its associated processes. For example, in a
quark–gluon plasma or other
QCD matter, at every point in space there is a chemical potential for
photons, a chemical potential for electrons, a chemical potential for
baryon number,
electric charge, and so forth. In the case of photons, photons are
bosons and can very easily and rapidly appear or disappear. Therefore, at thermodynamic equilibrium, the chemical potential of photons is in most physical situations always and everywhere zero. The reason is, if the chemical potential somewhere was higher than zero, photons would spontaneously disappear from that area until the chemical potential went back to zero; likewise, if the chemical potential somewhere was less than zero, photons would spontaneously appear until the chemical potential went back to zero. Since this process occurs extremely rapidly - at least, it occurs rapidly in the presence of dense charged matter or also in the walls of the textbook example for a photon gas of blackbody radiation - it is safe to assume that the photon chemical potential here is never different from zero. A physical situation where the chemical potential for photons can differ from zero are material-filled optical microcavities, with spacings between cavity mirrors in the wavelength regime. In such two-dimensional cases, photon gases with tuneable chemical potential, much reminiscent to gases of material particles, can be observed. Electric charge is different because it is intrinsically conserved, i.e. it can be neither created nor destroyed. It can, however, diffuse. The "chemical potential of electric charge" controls this diffusion: Electric charge, like anything else, will tend to diffuse from areas of higher chemical potential to areas of lower chemical potential. Other conserved quantities like
baryon number are the same. In fact, each conserved quantity is associated with a chemical potential and a corresponding tendency to diffuse to equalize it out. In the case of electrons, the behaviour depends on temperature and context. At low temperatures, with no
positrons present, electrons cannot be created or destroyed. Therefore, there is an electron chemical potential that might vary in space, causing diffusion. At very high temperatures, however, electrons and positrons can spontaneously appear out of the vacuum (
pair production), so the chemical potential of electrons by themselves becomes a less useful quantity than the chemical potential of the conserved quantities like (electrons minus positrons). The chemical potentials of
bosons and
fermions is related to the number of particles and the temperature by
Bose–Einstein statistics and
Fermi–Dirac statistics respectively.
Chemical potential in mixtures and solutions In a mixture or solution, the chemical potential of a substance i depends strongly on its relative concentration, which is usually quantified by
mole fraction x_i. The exact dependence is sensitive to the substance, the solvent, and the presence of any other substances in the solution, however, two universal behaviours appear at the extremes of concentration: • In the regime of the substance being nearly pure (i.e., it is a nearly pure
solvent), the chemical potential approaches a logarithmic dependence: :: \mu_i(x_i) \rightarrow \mu_i(1) + RT \ln(x_i), as x_i \rightarrow 1. : where \mu_{i}(1) is the chemical potential of the pure substance. This universal form applies since it is a
colligative property of all solutions. For a volatile solvent, this corresponds to
Raoult's law. • In the regime of the substance being very dilute (i.e., it is a very dilute
solute), the chemical potential also approaches a logarithmic dependence though with a different offset \mu_{i}^\infty: :: \mu_i(x_i) \rightarrow \mu_{i}^\infty + RT \ln(x_i), as x_i \rightarrow 0. : This universal dependence is a consequence of the dissolved particles of the dilute substance being so far from each other that they act effectively independently, analogous to an
ideal gas. For a volatile solute, this corresponds to
Henry's law. • Note that if the solution contains solutes that dissociate (such as an electrolyte/salt), the above forms do apply but only with certain definitions. The adjacent figure shows the dependence of \mu_i on x_i for various hypothetical substances, where a logarithmic scale is used for x_i (so the above limiting forms appear as straight lines). The dashed lines show, for each case, one of the two limiting forms stated above. Note that for the special case of an
ideal mixture (ideal solution), the chemical potential is exactly \mu_{i}(1) + RT \ln(x_i) over the entire range, and \mu_{i}^\infty = \mu_{i}(1). In the study of chemistry, and especially in tabulated data and
thermodynamic models for real solutions, it is common to re-parameterize the chemical potential in solution as a dimensionless
activity or
activity coefficient, that quantifies the deviation of \mu_i from a chosen logarithmic ideal such as the above. In the case of solutes, the dilute logarithmic ideal may be written instead in terms of
molarity,
molality,
vapor pressure,
mass fraction, or others, instead of mole fraction. ==See also==