Thread Closed

Van der Waals force

 
Share Thread Thread Tools
Mar26-07, 09:34 PM   #1
 

Van der Waals force


Hello,

Can any one lead me or give me a hint on how to solve this problem?

Interaction between neutral atoms and molecules can be decomposed to
two different forces: an attractive force at large distances (the Van der
Waals force), and a repulsive force at short distances (due to overlap between electron wavefunctions). A simple mathematical description of this
interaction between two particles is given by the Lennard-Jones potential:


U (r) = 4*epsilon [(sigma/r)^12 - (sigma/r)^6]


where [sigma] and [epsilon] are empirical parameters (epsilon is the depth of the potential well and sigma is the (finite) distance at which the potential is zero), and r is the distance between the particles.

(a) Sketch this potential.

(b) Are there any forbidden regions? If so, what are they and why? If
not, why not?

(c) Obtain an estimate for the number of allowed energy levels corresponding
to bounded states.

(d) Calculate the energies of these (bounded) energy levels.

Thanks a lot!! :D

Talib
 
PhysOrg.com
PhysOrg
science news on PhysOrg.com

>> Hong Kong launches first electric taxis
>> Morocco to harness the wind in energy hunt
>> Galaxy's Ring of Fire
Mar26-07, 11:57 PM   #2
 
Recognitions:
Gold Membership Gold Member
Quote by Talib View Post
Hello,

Can any one lead me or give me a hint on how to solve this problem?

Interaction between neutral atoms and molecules can be decomposed to
two different forces: an attractive force at large distances (the Van der
Waals force), and a repulsive force at short distances (due to overlap between electron wavefunctions). A simple mathematical description of this
interaction between two particles is given by the Lennard-Jones potential:


U (r) = 4*epsilon [(sigma/r)^12 - (sigma/r)^6]


where [sigma] and [epsilon] are empirical parameters (epsilon is the depth of the potential well and sigma is the (finite) distance at which the potential is zero), and r is the distance between the particles.

(a) Sketch this potential.

(b) Are there any forbidden regions? If so, what are they and why? If
not, why not?

(c) Obtain an estimate for the number of allowed energy levels corresponding
to bounded states.

(d) Calculate the energies of these (bounded) energy levels.

Thanks a lot!! :D

Talib
have you even tried yet?

I'll get you started on a). You're basically just looking at U as a function of r, everything else is a constant. plot the points r at 0 and r at infnite to get a couple ideas for how the graph looks. You can also take the derivative and set it to 0 to find minimums and maximums.
 
Mar27-07, 12:56 PM   #3
 
aite thanks .. i figured the drawing .. but how can i obtain an estimate of the # of allowed energy levels??
 
Mar27-07, 01:03 PM   #4
 
Recognitions:
Gold Membership Gold Member

Van der Waals force


Quote by Talib View Post
aite thanks .. i figured the drawing .. but how can i obtain an estimate of the # of allowed energy levels??
I'm taking solid-state right now, I haven't done quantum yet, so that's where I saw Leonard-Jones potentials, and we just solved for minimum energy.

I'm thinking it will have to do with your minimums on your graph, since minimums in potential energy usually represent a stable equilibrium.
 
Thread Closed
Thread Tools


Similar Threads for: Van der Waals force
Thread Forum Replies
van der waals gas Advanced Physics Homework 0
Van Der Waals Force General Physics 6
van der waals Advanced Physics Homework 0
London van der Waals force Advanced Physics Homework 2
Van der Waals force? Quantum Physics 2