What Causes a Voltage in a Circuit with an LED and Filament Lamp?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Mrs Moggins
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Led
AI Thread Summary
Illuminating an LED with a filament lamp can produce a voltage due to the photo-electric effect. An LED, which consists of a p-n junction of two types of semiconductors, has a depletion region that is typically devoid of charge carriers. When light is shone on this region, the photo-electric effect can excite electrons, allowing them to escape from atoms and flow towards the p-side of the junction, thus generating a current. White light, including visible and infrared wavelengths, contains sufficient energy to free these electrons, enabling measurable current production in the LED.
Mrs Moggins
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
Does anybody know why illuminating an LED with a filament lamp would produce a voltage in a simple circuit with just an LED and voltmeter? I'm guessing it's related to the photo-electric effect, but I have no idea what is actually going on.

If any of you guys could help me out, or point me in the right direction, it would be a great help!

Thank you in advance!
 
Physics news on Phys.org
It would only make sense -- if passing current through an LED produces light, why wouldn't shining light on an LED produce current?

It is, in fact, the photo-electric effect. An LED is basically just a p-n junction, comprised of two kinds of semiconductors joined together. The region around the junction is normally depleted of charge carriers, because free electrons on the n-side of the junction want to rush over into the electron-starved p-side.

When you shine light on the depletion region, the photo-electric effect kicks electrons out of atoms. These free electrons then immediately slide down the potential hill toward the p-side of the device, and a current flows.

- Warren
 
Yeh, that seems to make sense. It was the point about the photoelectric effect freeing electrons in the depletion region that I was originally unsure about. Will white light incident on the depletion region definately free electrons from these otherwise stable atoms?
 
The frequency-sensitivity of an LED can be pretty complicated. A good thermal white light source should have enough light of every frequency to stimulate any LED to produce a measurable current.

- Warren
 
Ah ok, so visible or even infrared light has enough energy to free these electrons. Thank you very much for your help, it really is appreciated!
 
Thread 'Motional EMF in Faraday disc, co-rotating magnet axial mean flux'
So here is the motional EMF formula. Now I understand the standard Faraday paradox that an axis symmetric field source (like a speaker motor ring magnet) has a magnetic field that is frame invariant under rotation around axis of symmetry. The field is static whether you rotate the magnet or not. So far so good. What puzzles me is this , there is a term average magnetic flux or "azimuthal mean" , this term describes the average magnetic field through the area swept by the rotating Faraday...
Back
Top