Class content > Thermodynamics and statistical physics > Boltzmann distribution
Prerequisites:
The Boltzmann factor, e-E/kBT,tells us the relative probability of a particular arrangement (with a given energy). And if we're dealing with a system at constant pressure, we can use enthalpy as the relevant energy, and call it e-H/kBT.
But as we discussed at the end of the Boltzmann distribution page, that's not the whole story: we need to multiply it by the number of different arrangements at a given energy. Let's do the math and see what happens.
We know S = kB ln W (where S is the entropy and W is the number of arrangements), so solving for W we get W = eS/kB
So to find the overall probability that a system is in a given state, we multiply these together:
W * e-H/kBT = eS/kB * e-H/kBT = eTS/kBT* e-H/kBT = e-(H-TS)/kBT
What's H - TS? Hey, it's Gibbs free energy!
So the overall probability is actually proportional to e-G/kBT.
This tells us two things:
1) It's another way to illustrate that Gibbs free energy combines the effects of energy (here, that's the original Boltzmann factor) and of entropy (the number of possible arrangements)
2) This means that (for systems at constant pressure and temperature) Gibbs free energy is what really tells us which states are more probable, and therefore what a system is actually going to do. That's why Gibbs free energy gets so much attention in chemistry and biology.
Ben Dreyfus 1/9/12
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