HandsOn 25 - Location of the Precipitation Point
The following derivation uses a full complement of mathematics. Its purpose is to clarify the usual derivations of the location of the precipitation point in a diffusion tube (found in many chemistry books, for example) are inexact in their procedure, though correct in the final outcome.
Normal distribution. The normal or Gaussian distribution describes the results of a random walk. This is the distribution observed in Chapter 2. The Gaussian distribution describes the probability P(x) that a walker who starts at x = 0 will be at position x after taking N steps randomly back and forth along a line, each step of average length Lstep
In our model of the diffusion chamber, molecules diffuse from the two ends. We can choose x = 0 for the origin of one molecule, and x = $ \ell$ for the origin of the other molecule, where $ \ell$ is the length of the diffusion chamber. Then the probability P1(x) of finding a molecule of the first type at position x is
There is precipitation of solid (dust) when two molecules of different kinds meet one another and react. The first precipitation occurs when the first molecules to meet each other, namely in the extreme tails of the two distributions. Hence, the probability of ``meeting the tails'' of the two distributions would be the product P1(x) x P2(x), which would be also the probability Ppre(x) of observing precipitation at position x
Here we note that the use of distributions (6.13) and (6.14) is correct only for the first precipitation. When the precipitation has depleted the molecules in the tails of the distributions, then the distributions are no longer Gaussian. In fact, it turns out that when a steady state has been reached (when precipitation removes molecules at the same rate as new molecules leave the two ends of the diffusion tube), the distributions become straight lines descending from each end to zero at the point x given by Eq. 6.19.