What Is the Width of a Quantum Well for a 450nm Photon Transition?

AI Thread Summary
To determine the width of a quantum well for a 450nm photon transition, the energy eigenvalue equation E(n) = (h^2 * n^2) / (8 * m * L^2) is used. The energy of the photon is calculated using E = h * f, where frequency is derived from the wavelength. A participant noted confusion over the equation's constants, specifically the difference between using 2 and 8 in the denominator, which relates to the reduced Planck's constant. Another user confirmed that the correct width should be approximately 0.064nm, but expressed difficulty in obtaining this result. The discussion highlights the importance of accurately calculating frequency and understanding the equations involved.
SuperCheetah
Here is a question that is giving me fits.

An electron is trapped in an infinite quantum well. If the lowest energy transition is to produce a photon of 450nm-wavelength, what should be the well's width?

Any help is appreciated. :)
 
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The energy eigenvalue equation for an electron in a 1-D infinite square well is:

E(n) = (h^2 * n^2) / (8 * m * L^2),

where L is the width of the well.

A transition of energy states requires an emission or an absorption of a photon. The energy of a photon is:

E = h * f,

where f is the frequency of the photon.

Now you've got the equations; all you have to do is plug and chug.

eNtRopY
 
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Nevermind got the frequency, my books equation says that there is a 2 on the bottom instead of an 8?
 
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Call me an idiot but I'm still not getting the correct result. The answer is 0.064nm in width, but I keep getting extremely small numbers. Is there any additional help anyone might can give without totally giving away the problem? Thanks again!
 
look closer at the 2 and 8 term, you will find that the difference is due to that h(bar)=h/(2*pi)

I´m not sure what you are doing with the equation, but you are looking for a difference, a delta E, dose that help?

Could you check you answer again, I´m getting an answer of ~ 6.4*10^(-10)?
 
That is the correct answer you got, although I still wasn't able to get it before it was due. I can't figure out what I'm doing wrong. I'll try again later I guess. Thanks for the help. I think my problem lies in the frequency.
 
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