Chemical affinity results from electronic properties by which dissimilar substances are capable of forming chemical compounds. Specifically, the term refers to the tendency of an atom or compound to combine by chemical reaction with atoms or compounds of unlike composition.
The modern term chemical affinity is a somewhat modified variation of its eighteenth-century precursor "elective affinity" or elective attractions, a coinage of the Swedish chemist Torbern Olof Bergman from his book De attractionibus electivis (1775). Antoine Lavoisier, in his famed 1790 Elements of Chemistry, refers to Bergmann’s work and discusses the concept of elective affinities or attractions. The term generally relate to the phenomenon whereby certain atoms or molecules have the tendency to aggregate or bond. For example, in the 1919 book Chemistry of Human Life physician George W. Carey states: “Health depends on a proper amount of iron phosphate Fe3(PO4)2 in the blood, for the molecules of this salt have chemical affinity for oxygen and carry it to all parts of the organism.” In this antiquated context, chemical affinity is sometimes found synonymous with the term "magnetic attraction". Many writings, up until about 1925, also refer to a “law of chemical affinity”.
With the writings of Théophile de Donder as precedent, Prigogine and Defay in Chemical Thermodynamics (1954) defined chemical affinity (denoted by ) as a function of the increments in uncompensated heat of reaction and reaction progress variable (denoted by and , respectively):
This definition is useful for quantifying the factors responsible both for the state of equilibrium systems (where ), and for changes of state of non-equilibrium systems (where ).
ألفة كيميائية | Affinità chimica | אפיניות | Powinowactwo chemiczne
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"Chemical affinity".
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