Find current induced in the photoelectric effect

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SUMMARY

The discussion focuses on calculating the initial current produced by the photoelectric effect on a metal surface measuring 1.5mm x 2mm, with an incident light intensity of 4.5×10^-6 W/m² and a wavelength of 420nm. The problem states that one electron is emitted for every 300 incident photons. By using the equations for intensity (I=P/A), power (P=W/t), and current (I=Q/t), participants derive that the initial current is approximately 2.1 ×10^-14 A, or 21 femtoamperes (fA). The work function of the metal is noted as 3.4×10^-19 J, which influences the energy of the emitted electrons but does not alter the current calculation in this specific scenario.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of the photoelectric effect
  • Familiarity with basic physics equations: I=P/A, P=W/t, I=Q/t
  • Knowledge of photon energy calculations (E=hf)
  • Concept of electron charge and its role in current calculation
NEXT STEPS
  • Explore the implications of varying work functions on photoelectric emission
  • Learn about the relationship between light intensity and photon emission rates
  • Investigate the effects of different wavelengths on the photoelectric effect
  • Study advanced applications of the photoelectric effect in modern technology
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Students in physics, educators teaching the photoelectric effect, and researchers exploring applications of quantum mechanics in photonics.

NihalRi
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Homework Statement


A metal surface had dimensions of 1.5mm x 2mm. The intensity of light incident on surface is 4.5×10^-6 W/m^2. On average one electron is emitted for every 300 photons incident on the surface. Determine the initial current leaving the metal.
●wavelength of light incident is 420nm
●work function is 3.4×10^-19

Homework Equations


I=P/A
P=W/t
I=Q/t

The Attempt at a Solution


I know the intensity is related to the number of electrons that are emitted but not how, that's the only way I can think of aproaching this problem. Is there another way?
 
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NihalRi said:
I know the intensity is related to the number of electrons that are emitted
I don't think so..

Intensity is energy per unit time per unit area or power per unit area.
You can relate intensity to the number of photons incident per second just by replacing Power in the Formula of Intensity
by (Energy of 1 photon * n) where n is the no. of photons incident per second. Calculate for n.

It is given that 300 incident photons emit one electron, try calculating the current from this.

P. S current is charge emitted per unit time.
 
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NihalRi said:

Homework Statement


A metal surface had dimensions of 1.5mm x 2mm. The intensity of light incident on surface is 4.5×10^-6 W/m^2. On average one electron is emitted for every 300 photons incident on the surface. Determine the initial current leaving the metal.
●wavelength of light incident is 420nm
●work function is 3.4×10^-19

Homework Equations


I=P/A
P=W/t
I=Q/t

The Attempt at a Solution


I know the intensity is related to the number of electrons that are emitted but not how, that's the only way I can think of aproaching this problem. Is there another way?
First compute the number of photons per unit time incident on the metal.
The rest is a gimme.
 
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AbhinavJ said:
I don't think so..

Intensity is energy per unit time per unit area or power per unit area.
You can relate intensity to the number of photons incident per second just by replacing Power in the Formula of Intensity
by (Energy of 1 photon * n) where n is the no. of photons incident per second. Calculate for n.

It is given that 300 incident photons emit one electron, try calculating the current from this.

P. S current is charge emitted per unit time.
Ok so,
I=P/A becomes, P=IA=1.35×10^-11 J/s
But the power = Ep *(n/t) , {Ep= energy of photon=work function=3.4×10^-19J}
n/t ≈ 39700000 {n = number of photons}
Now I divide this number by three hundred to get the number of eldctrons per time and then multiply by the charge of the electron to get the value of the current = 2.1 ×10^-14 A or 21fA.
So tiny did I do this right?

By the way the units for the work function was J
 
NihalRi said:
{Ep= energy of photon=work function=3.4×10^-19J}

Are you sure?
What is the energy of a photon dependent on?
 
AbhinavJ said:
Are you sure?
What is the energy of a photon dependent on?
AbhinavJ said:
Are you sure?
What is the energy of a photon dependent on?
hf, oh so I use this instead of the work function?
 
NihalRi said:
hf, oh so I use this instead of the work function?
Yes!
 
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NihalRi said:
hf, oh so I use this instead of the work function?
The work function is what determines the minimum photon energy to get photoelectric emission, but the way the problem is stated its effect is included in the wording. You get 1 electron per 300 photons regardless of the work function. If the problem had given just the incident power and frequency (assuming monochromatic light) then you would have had to have taken the work function into account, which varies from metal to metal.
 
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