Threshold Frequency: Equation & Electron Release

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The threshold frequency is defined as the minimum frequency required for a photon to free an electron from a material, represented by the equation W = hf₀, where W is the work function, h is Planck's constant, and f₀ is the threshold frequency. This frequency corresponds to the minimum energy needed to bring an electron to the surface of a material, but not necessarily to eject it completely. In the context of the photoelectric effect, the full energy equation is Eₚₕₒₜₒₙ = W + Eₖₘₐₓ, where Eₖₘₐₓ represents the maximum kinetic energy of the ejected electron. When the kinetic energy is zero, the equation simplifies to derive the work function in terms of the threshold frequency.
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What is the equation used to solve for the threshold frequency?

Is the threshold frequency the minimum amount of energy requird to free an electron from the nucleus?
 
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W=hf_{0}

where W is the work function, h is Planck's constant, and f_{0} is the threshold frequency. I believe the answer to your second question is yes.
 
We talk of threshold frequency because the energy of the photon is h*f. That energy should be sufficient enough to knock out the electron.
 
rgshankar76 said:
We talk of threshold frequency because the energy of the photon is h*f. That energy should be sufficient enough to knock out the electron.

To be precise this is just sufficient energy to bring an electron to the surface but not quite to knock it out of the metal. (Again this depends on how you interpret "knock out"). Thats why in the so called Einstein equation for photoelectric effect, there's a second term which accounts for the kinetic energy of the ejected photoelectron...if this term were zero, the electron would--in principle--stay there.
 
That is true. The full equation is

E_{photon}=W+E_{K}_{max}

As you can see, the equation for W as a function of threshold frequency is derived from this by setting the kinetic energy of the photoelectron to zero.
 
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