In
chemical thermodynamics, the
fugacity of a
real gas is an effective partial
pressure which replaces the mechanical partial pressure in an accurate computation of the chemical equilibrium constant. It is equal to the pressure of an
ideal gas which has the same
chemical potential as the real gas. For example, nitrogen gas (N
2) at 0°C and a pressure of has a fugacity of . This means that the chemical potential of real nitrogen at a pressure of 100 atm is less than if nitrogen were an ideal gas; the value of the chemical potential is that which nitrogen as an ideal gas would have at a pressure of 97.03 atm.