In physical chemistry, there are numerous quantities associated with chemical compounds and reactions; notably in terms of amounts of substance, activity or concentration of a substance, and the rate of reaction. This article uses SI units.
Conventionally for concentrations and activities, square brackets [ ] are used around the chemical molecular formula. For an arbitrary atom, generic letters in upright non-bold typeface such as A, B, R, X or Y etc. are often used.
No standard symbols are used for the following quantities, as specifically applied to a substance:
Usually the symbol for the quantity with a subscript of some reference to the quantity is used, or the quantity is written with the reference to the chemical in round brackets. For example, the mass of water might be written in subscripts as mH2O, mwater, maq, mw (if clear from context) etc., or simply as m(H2O). Another example could be the electronegativity of the fluorine-fluorine covalent bond, which might be written with subscripts χF-F, χFF or χF-F etc., or brackets χ(F-F), χ(FF) etc.
Neither is standard. For the purpose of this article, the nomenclature is as follows, closely (but not exactly) matching standard use.
For general equations with no specific reference to an entity, quantities are written as their symbols with an index to label the component of the mixture - i.e. qi. The labeling is arbitrary in initial choice, but once chosen fixed for the calculation.
If any reference to an actual entity (say hydrogen ions H+) or any entity at all (say X) is made, the quantity symbol q is followed by curved ( ) brackets enclosing the molecular formula of X, i.e. q(X), or for a component i of a mixture q(Xi). No confusion should arise with the notation for a mathematical function.
Quantification
General basic quantities
Quantity (Common Name/s)
(Common) Symbol/s
SI Units
Dimension
Number of molecules
N
dimensionless
dimensionless
Mass
m
kg
[M]
Number of moles, amount of substance, amount
n
mol
[N]
Volume of mixture or solvent, unless otherwise stated
The dummy indices on the substances X and Ylabel the components (arbitrary but fixed for calculation); they are not the numbers of each component molecules as in usual chemistry notation.
The units for the chemical constants are unusual since they can vary depending on the stoichiometry of the reaction, and the number of reactant and product components. The general units for equilibrium constants can be determined by usual methods of dimensional analysis. For the generality of the kinetics and equilibria units below, let the indices for the units be;
Click here to see their derivation
For the constant Kc;
Substitute the concentration units into the equation and simplify:,
(written this way by convention) the electrode potential for the half reactions are written as and respectively.
For the case of a metal-metal half electrode, letting M represent the metal and z be its valency, the half reaction takes the form of a reduction reaction:
^Quantitative Chemical Analysis (4th Edition), I.M. Kolthoff, E.B. Sandell, E.J. Meehan, S. Bruckenstein, The Macmillan Co. (USA) 1969, Library of Congress Catalogue Number 69 10291
^Quantitative Chemical Analysis (4th Edition), I.M. Kolthoff, E.B. Sandell, E.J. Meehan, S. Bruckenstein, The Macmillan Co. (USA) 1969, Library of Congress Catalogue Number 69 10291
^Physical chemistry, P.W. Atkins, Oxford University Press, 1978, ISBN0-19-855148-7
Sources
Physical chemistry, P.W. Atkins, Oxford University Press, 1978, ISBN0-19-855148-7
Chemistry, Matter and the Universe, R.E. Dickerson, I. Geis, W.A. Benjamin Inc. (USA), 1976, ISBN0-8053-2369-4
Chemical thermodynamics, D.J.G. Ives, University Chemistry Series, Macdonald Technical and Scientific co. ISBN0-356-03736-3.
Elements of Statistical Thermodynamics (2nd Edition), L.K. Nash, Principles of Chemistry, Addison-Wesley, 1974, ISBN0-201-05229-6
Statistical Physics (2nd Edition), F. Mandl, Manchester Physics, John Wiley & Sons, 2008, ISBN978-0-471-91533-1
Further reading
Quanta: A handbook of concepts, P.W. Atkins, Oxford University Press, 1974, ISBN0-19-855493-1
Molecular Quantum Mechanics Parts I and II: An Introduction to QUANTUM CHEMISTRY (Volume 1), P.W. Atkins, Oxford University Press, 1977, ISBN0-19-855129-0
Thermodynamics, From Concepts to Applications (2nd Edition), A. Shavit, C. Gutfinger, CRC Press (Taylor and Francis Group, USA), 2009, ISBN978-1-4200-7368-3
Properties of matter, B.H. Flowers, E. Mendoza, Manchester Physics Series, J. Wiley and Sons, 1970, ISBN978-0-471-26498-9