That seems illogical. Like if you said, an atom has 3.5 electrons. How can a number of particles not be a whole number?
This is a pretty big discussion but light isn't a particle. In this case it maybe better to think of it as a stream of energy. So maybe it can be averaged, ΔG
r° after all is a statistical average over 6.0221·10
23 reactions and the amount of energy needed for each.
I'm not sure, perhaps someone else can clarify why a) we keep getting non-integer answers (I am not satisfied with saying 2.73=3, IChO does not leave things that far open) b) if it really has to be an integer in all these cases.
An example for you: what's the oxidation state of sulphur in S
4O
62-? Must be ((6*2)-2)/4=+2.5, right? Not that one of the sulphur atoms really gets 0.5 electrons ... it's an average! (Hope this example isn't too bad - I realize it doesn't relate directly to our case but the way I see it, seems possible that the number of photons wouldn't be discrete)
Or possibly it IS discrete and we just have to round up the number of photons, even if the minimum number of photons is calculated as 2.2 we'll still need 3 to provide enough energy, etc.