How Do You Calculate the Wavelength Needed to Eject an Electron from Sodium?

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To calculate the wavelength needed to eject an electron from sodium, the photoelectric effect formula is used: eV_0 = (hc/λ) - φ, where φ is the work function. The user needs to set eV_0 to zero to find the longest wavelength, leading to the equation λ = hc/φ. Converting electron volts to joules is necessary for consistency in units, as the Planck constant (h) is in joules. The standard unit for wavelength is meters, so the final answer will be in that unit. For calculating the energy of the fastest ejected electrons, the formula is (photon energy) - (work function) = maximum kinetic energy.
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Hi.

How do I calculate this:

How long is the shortest light-wavelenght that can breake loose a elektron from a natrium surface?
 
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Thank you for the link, clive.
This is what I've got now:

eV_{0} = \frac{hc}{\lambda}-\phi
h = 6,6261 * 10^{-34}
c = 2,99792458*10^8
\phi =2,28eV

I need eV_0 to calculate \lambda. How do I get it?

And ofcourse I want the longest wavelength and not the shortest as I said before. :smile:
 
Kahsi said:
I need eV_0 to calculate \lambda. How do I get it?
eV_0 is the maximum KE of the ejected electron; to find the minimum energy photon (longest wavelength) needed to eject an electron, set eV_0 to 0.
 
Okay so we got

\frac{hc}{\lambda} = \phi
h = 6,6261*10^{-34}
c\approx 3*10^8
\phi = 2,28eV

This gives us

\lambda\approx 8,7*10^{-26}

Is this correct? Maybe i should turn eV to joule first?

Btw: Is the answer in meter? (I'm new to frequency)
 
Last edited:
use standard units

Kahsi said:
Maybe i should turn eV to joule first?
You'd better use consistent units throughout. Since h = 6.625 x 10-34 J-s, you'd better convert eV to Joules!

Btw: Is the answer in meter? (I'm new to frequency)
The standard unit for length is the meter, so that equation for \lambda will give you meters.
 
Another question. If I'm lighting up a natriumsurface with a quicksilver-lamp electrons will "release". But which formulas should I use to calculate which energy the fastest electrons will get?

Thank you in advance.
 
Kahsi said:
But which formulas should I use to calculate which energy the fastest electrons will get?
See post #4 in this thread. You have the formula.
(Photon energy) - (energy needed to eject an electron) = maximum KE of ejected electron

This may help you: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photoelectric_effect#Explanation
 
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