We first calculate the
entropy of mixing, the increase in the
uncertainty about the locations of the molecules when they are interspersed. In the pure condensed
phases –
solvent and polymer – a molecule exists for any arbitrarily small volume element. The
expression for the
entropy of mixing of small molecules in terms of
mole fractions is no longer reasonable when the
solute is a
macromolecular chain. We take account of this dis
symmetry in molecular sizes by assuming that individual polymer segments and individual solvent molecules occupy sites on a
lattice. Each site is occupied by exactly one molecule of the solvent or by one
monomer of the polymer chain, so the total number of sites is : N = N_1 + xN_2 where N_1 is the number of solvent molecules and N_2 is the number of polymer molecules, each of which has x segments. For a
random walk on a lattice we can calculate the
entropy change (the increase in
spatial uncertainty) as a result of mixing solute and solvent. : \Delta S_{\rm mix} = -k_{\rm B}\left[ N_1\ln\tfrac{N_1}{N} + N_2\ln\tfrac{xN_2}{N} \right] where k_{\rm B} is the
Boltzmann constant. Define the lattice
volume fractions \phi_1 and \phi_2 : \phi_1 = \frac{N_1}{N}, \quad \phi_2 = \frac{xN_2}{N} These are also the probabilities that a given lattice site, chosen at
random, is occupied by a solvent molecule or a polymer segment, respectively. Thus : \Delta S_{\rm mix} = -k_{\rm B}[\,N_1\ln\phi_1 + N_2\ln\phi_2\,] For a small solute whose molecules occupy just one lattice site, x equals one, the volume fractions reduce to
molecular or mole fractions, and we recover the usual
entropy of mixing. In addition to the entropic effect, we can expect an
enthalpy change. There are three molecular interactions to consider: solvent-solvent w_{11}, monomer-monomer w_{22} (not the
covalent bonding, but between different chain sections), and monomer-solvent w_{12}. Each of the last occurs at the expense of the average of the other two, so the energy increment per monomer-solvent contact is : \Delta w = w_{12} - \tfrac{1}{2}(w_{22} + w_{11}) The total number of such contacts is : xN_2z\phi_1 = N_1\phi_2z where z is the coordination number, the number of nearest neighbors for a lattice site, each one occupied either by one chain segment or a solvent molecule. That is, xN_2 is the total number of polymer segments (monomers) in the solution, so xN_2z is the number of nearest-neighbor sites to
all the polymer segments. Multiplying by the probability \phi_1 that any such site is occupied by a solvent molecule, we obtain the total number of polymer-solvent molecular interactions. An approximation following
mean field theory is made by following this procedure, thereby reducing the complex problem of many interactions to a simpler problem of one interaction. The enthalpy change is equal to the energy change per polymer monomer-solvent interaction multiplied by the number of such interactions : \Delta H_{\rm mix} = N_1\phi_2z\Delta w The polymer-solvent interaction parameter
chi is defined as : \chi_{12} = \frac{z\Delta w}{k_{\rm B}T} It depends on the nature of both the solvent and the solute, and is the only
material-specific parameter in the model. The enthalpy change becomes : \Delta H_{\rm mix} = k_{\rm B} T N_1\phi_2\chi_{12} Assembling terms, the total free energy change is : \Delta G_{\rm mix} = RT[\,n_1\ln\phi_1 + n_2\ln\phi_2 + n_1\phi_2\chi_{12}\,] where we have converted the expression from molecules N_1 and N_2 to moles n_1 and n_2 by transferring the
Avogadro constant N_\text{A} to the
gas constant R = k_{\rm B}N_\text{A}. The value of the interaction parameter can be estimated from the
Hildebrand solubility parameters \delta_a and \delta_b : \chi_{12} = \frac{V_{\rm seg}(\delta_a - \delta_b)^2}{RT} where V_{\rm seg} is the actual volume of a polymer segment. In the most general case the interaction \Delta w and the ensuing mixing parameter, \chi, is a free energy parameter, thus including an entropic component. This means that aside to the regular mixing entropy there is another entropic contribution from the interaction between solvent and monomer. This contribution is sometimes very important in order to make quantitative predictions of thermodynamic properties. More advanced solution theories exist, such as the
Flory–Krigbaum theory. == Liquid-liquid phase separation ==