Photoelectric Effect Lecture PDF
Photoelectric Effect Lecture PDF
Photoelectric Effect Lecture PDF
Today:
I. Understand the P.E. experiment and what results you would
expect if light were a classical wave (like physicists at the
time expected the experiment should give).
II. What experimental results it actually did give.
III. The implications/interpretation of the results.
- 10 V +
3
Photoelectric effect experiment apparatus.
- 10 V +
4
A note about units of energy
Joules: good for macroscopic energy conversions
But when talking about energy of single electrons Joules is
inconvenient… (too big)
Define new energy unit (the electron-volt (eV))
= kinetic energy gained by an electron when
accelerate through 1 volt of potential difference
ΔKE = - ΔU
0V 1V
F + = - q ΔV
+ = - (- e)*(1V)
E path + = + (e)*(1V) = 1.6 x 10-19 J
+
= 1eV
5
swimming pool analogy- If no water slops over side of pool, no
flow. Little pump or big pump, still no water current.
If electrons stuck inside metal plate, no current for little or big V.
pump
Current
A B
0 Voltage
0 Voltage
Current
Current
D 0 Voltage 7
0 Voltage
What’s happening here?
Each electron that pops out is accelerated more so hits
far plate with higher velocity,
BUT # of electrons = constant
sec
So current is constant!
Current
NOT V=IR !!
0 Battery Voltage
reverse V, Vacuum tube diode. Works.
no electrons - early electronic device.
flow. 8
Photoelectric effect experiment apparatus.
Current
Also takes time to heat up. C
•Light on longer, heat more, e’s
out faster = more current.
0 Voltage
•Color light does not matter, only intensity. 9
Have now covered.
I. How apparatus works.
I
First experiment- I vs. V high intensity, low intensity
I vs. V two different colors
11
HIGH intensity
e’s
do low I exper.
0 Battery Voltage
12
Which graph represents low and high intensity curves?
I
I
A B
0 Batt. V 0 Batt. V
I
I
C D
0 Batt. V
0 Batt. V
I
0 Batt. V 13
HIGH intensity LOW intensity
e’s
I
Fewer electrons pop off metal
Current decreases.
Current proportional to light intensity.
I
ans. B
0 Battery Voltage
14
HIGH intensity LOW intensity
e’s
I
Same KE electrons
popping off metal.
So same “stopping
potential”. I
0 Battery Voltage
15
look at sim for few different
colors, small forward V
I
Initial KE
Predict shape
of the graph
0 Frequency of light
16
Initial KE
Initial KE
A B
0 Frequency 0 Frequency
Initial KE
Initial KE
C D
0 Frequency 0 Frequency
E. something different 17
Correct answer is D.
do sim showing graph
I
As the frequency of light increases
Initial KE
h h
Ephoton
work function (Φ)
Outside
metal Photon gives electron
Energy
“kick of energy”.
Inside
metal
Electrons have equal chance of absorbing photon:
Max KE of electrons = photon energy - Φ
Min KE = 0 26
Some electrons, not enough energy to pop-out, energy into heat.
Electrons over large range of energy have equal
chance of absorbing photons.
Ephot
Electron potential
27
Electrons over large range of energy have equal
chance of absorbing photons.
Ephot
elect. potential
work function Φ
energy
metal
c. more electrons come out with violet
c. Nickel = 5.01 eV
d. lead = 4.14 eV
1 2 3 4 5
e. Sodium = 2.28 eV 30
Time (millisec)
Clicker question discussion
After decide on answer, don’t stop thinking/discussing!
Think of as many reasons as possible to support your
answer and/or rule out other answers. Other
perspectives, other situations and information that may
have relevance.
“Line on electron energy vs frequency graph must
go to zero before zero frequency, because sunlight hits
stuff but doesn’t make electrons come out of everything.”
CQ: Shine in light of 300 nm. The most energetic electrons come
out with kinetic energy, KE300. A voltage diff of 1.8 V is
required to stop these electrons. What is the work function Φ
for this plate? (e.g. the minimum amount of energy needed to
kick electron out of metal?)
a. 1.2 eV
b. 2.9 eV
c. 6.4 eV
d. 11.3 eV
e. none of the above
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