Particle number
In thermodynamics, the particle number of a thermodynamic system is the number of constituent particles in that system. The particle number is a fundamental List of [thermodynamic properties|thermodynamic property] which is conjugate to the chemical potential. Unlike most physical quantities, the particle number is a dimensionless quantity, specifically a countable quantity. It is an extensive property, as it is directly proportional to the size of the system under consideration and thus meaningful only for closed systems.
A constituent particle is one that cannot be broken into smaller pieces at the scale of energy involved in the process. For example, in a thermodynamic system consisting of a piston containing water vapour, the particle number is the number of water molecules in the system. The meaning of constituent particles, and thereby of particle numbers, is thus temperature-dependent.
Determining the particle number
The concept of particle number plays a major role in theoretical considerations. In situations where the actual particle number of a given thermodynamical system needs to be determined, mainly in chemistry, it is not practically possible to measure it directly by counting the particles. If the material is homogeneous and has a known amount of substance ''n expressed in moles, the particle number N'' can be found by the relation :where NA is the Avogadro constant.