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Photoelectric Effect Equipment • • • • • • Leybold Photocell • Jarrell Ash Monochromator • Cary vibrating reed electrometer • Tungsten-Halogen lamp • Metrologic He-Ne laser • Fluke multimeter precision voltage divider 10 V DC power supply flashlight nanoAmpere current source 1 m optical bench Preparation You should review Einstein’s explanation of the photoelectric effect. Review the band theory of conduction in metals, and the diffraction of light. Goals of the Experiment To investigate some properties of the photoelectric effect and photocells. To get some experience with low level current measurements. To better understand optical spectra by using a monochromator and a Tungsten-Halogen lamp as a line source. Theory The photoelectric effect is one example of an interaction between energy and matter. In the photoelectric effect, a material is illuminated with a beam of light and electrons are ejected from the material. These emitted electrons are called photoelectrons. This effect occurs in any material, whether solid, liquid, or gas. The photoelectric effect was first noticed by Heinrich Hertz (1857-1894) in 1887 when he observed that shining ultraviolet light into the region between a spark gap raised the conductivity of the air in the gap. Later experiments showed that shining ultraviolet light onto a metallic plate gave it a Figure 13.1: Equipment setup positive charge. In 1898 Philipp Lenard (1862-1947) and J. J. Thompson (1856-1940) showed that the particles being emitted were actually electrons. Lenard later won the 1905 Nobel prize in physics for his work on electrons. Thompson won the 1906 Nobel prize for his related work on the conduction of gases. As described below, the photoelectric effect has many properties that simply cannot be accounted for by a wave theory of light. In 1900, to partly explain the effect, Max Planck (1858-1947) suggested that an atom could only absorb or emit energy in discrete bundles called quanta. He was later honoured with the 1918 Nobel prize for this insight. It was left to Albert Einstein (1879-1955) in 1905 to fully explain the photoelectric effect using Planck’s ideas. Einstein’s theory of the photoelectric effect explains all the observed properties of the photoelectric effect. He won the 1921 Nobel prize for this work. Einstein’s theory of photoelectricity was experimentally verified by Robert Millikan (1868-1953) in 1916 in a series of careful measurements that also accurately determined Planck’s constant for the first time. This work earned Millikan a Nobel prize in 1923. The physics experiment to be done here is in fact similar in method and construction to Millikan’s prize winning experiment. If one assumes that the photoelectric interaction is simply a light wave phenomenon then several conclusions follow immediately. The wave theory predicts that the energy of the emitted electrons is proportional to the square of the light frequency. Also, there should be photoelectrons at any wavelength, if the light is intense enough. Third, the electron energy should be proportional to the light intensity. Fourth, the electrons should be emitted with a large delay that depends on the light intensity and the illumination area. Lastly, the amount of electrons knocked off should be proportional to the size of the atom and hence to the amount of surface exposed to the light. Experimental measurements of the photoelectric effect show that none of these properties are true. The energy of the photoelectrons varies linearly with frequency. Below a critical frequency, no photoelectrons are emitted regardless of the light intensity. Furthermore, the photelectron energy is independent of the light intensity and the illumination area. Lastly, there is essentially no delay between the arrival of light and the emission of photoelectrons, regardless of the light intensity and illumination area. Einstein explained the photoelectric effect by supposing that the energy of electromagnetic radiation is carried in discrete bundles called photons. The energy, E, of a photon is given by E = hf (13.1) where f is the frequency of the light and h is Planck’s constant. The currently accepted value for Planck’s constant is 6.6261 × 10−34 2 J · s. Equation 13.1 implies that higher frequency light like ultraviolet radiation is more energetic than lower frequency light such as infrared light. Each photon can only give up a discrete amount of energy, E, to an electron. Suppose that the electron is bound to the material with energy W. This is then the amount of energy needed to liberate an electron from the surface of a material. W is called the work function of the material. Any extra energy is transformed into kinetic energy of the photoelectron. The energy balance equation for the incoming photon versus the outgoing photoelectron is hf = W + K (13.2) where K is the kinetic energy of the photoelectron. Therefore, a photoelectron has kinetic energy given by K = hf −W (13.3) This equation handily explains all the observed features of the photoelectric effect. There is a lower limit below which the light generates no photoelectrons because a photon with energy less than W does not have enough energy to liberate an electron from the surface of the material. If the photon does have sufficient energy (high enough frequency), an electron is knocked loose as soon as a photon interacts with it. This explains why the emission of photoelectrons is nearly simultaneous with the arrival of the illuminating light. Also, Equation 13.3 shows directly why the energy of a photoelectron varies linearly with the illuminating light frequency. Lastly, Equation 13.3 shows that the energy of a photoelectron is independent of light intensity. When a bright light illuminates a surface, many more electrons are knocked out of the surface because there are more photons, but each photoelectron has the kinetic energy specified by Equation 13.3. Brighter illumination induces a higher photocurrent, simply because more photoelectrons are in motion. The arrangement used for examining the photoelectric effect is shown in Figure 13.2. Light is made to shine on a potassium surface called the photocathode. Photoelectrons are ejected from this surface and collected by the nearby platinum ring called the anode. The work function of potassium is 2.30 eV and the work function of platinum is 5.65 eV. This means light with a wavelength longer than about 540 nm will not eject electrons from either the platinum or the potassium. Light with a wavelength shorter than 220 nm will begin to eject photoelectrons from the anode as well as the photocathode. This gives a window from 540 nm to 220 nm in which photoelectrons are ejected from the photocathode alone. This is the wavelength range for which 3 Equation 13.3 can be examined. The anode and photocathode are in vacuum so the photoelectrons do not lose energy except at the anode. Potassium Photocathode Photoelectrons Figure 13.2: Photocell Platinum Anode Evacuated Glass Bulb Light A Adjustable Stopping Potential V Cary Electrometer The emission of electrons from the photocathode (photocurrent) is detected by the electrometer. An electrometer is basically an extremely sensitive current meter. The anode voltage polarity opposes the arrival of photoelectrons. The energy of the photoelectrons is found by raising the anode voltage to the point where the photocurrent stops. If the illuminating light is monochromatic, this stopping potential , Vs , gives a determination for the kinetic energy of the photoelectrons so that h W f− (13.4) e e Since e = 1.6022 × 10−19 C, plotting stopping voltage versus illumination frequency gives a value for Planck’s constant from the slope of the line. The arrangement of Figure 1 also permits experimental verification that stopping voltage (kinetic energy) is independent of light intensity but the photocurrent (as measured by the electrometer) is strongly dependent on the light intensity. It is also possible to verify that below a certain critical frequency, no photocurrent is stimulated regardless of light level. Equation 13.3 suggests that the intercept of the graph yields the work function of the potassium photocathode, Wc. A more careful examination indicates that this is incorrect. Both the cathode and the anode are made from metals. This means the outer shell electrons inside the metal partially fill an energy band called the conduction band. The highest energy level in the conduction band with an electron in it is called the Fermi energy. At absolute zero there are no electrons above the Fermi energy and all energy levels below the Fermi energy are completely filled with electrons. At higher temperatures this boundary is not sharp as many electrons move to higher levels on thermal Vs = 4 energy alone. The fact the the Fermi energy lies in the middle of the conduction band explains why the metal is a good conductor. There are many nearby unfilled energy levels available for the electrons to occupy. To fully remove an electron, a surface needs more energy than just the Fermi energy. The aggregate attraction of the complete metallic lattice prevents the electron from being free even when removed from the conduction band. The extra required energy to completely free an electron from the surface is called the surface barrier energy. The surface barrier energy depends greatly on the exact nature of the surface. Impurities, trace gases, and crystal structure all affect the surface barrier energy and hence the perceived work function of the material. The work function for a metal is the sum of the Fermi energy and the surface barrier energy. Figure 13.3 shows an energy level diagram for the conduction electrons in the metallic cathode and anode. The retarding voltage applied to the anode determines the potential difference between the Fermi levels in the anode and photocathode. As shown in Figure 13.3, this is not the retarding potential seen by a photoelectron travelling between cathode and anode. To find the true retarding potential as seen by a photoelectron, let 0 Vs be the true stopping potential and Vs be the potential as seen by the voltmeter. Then from Figure 13.3 Vs0 = Vs + Wa Wc − e e (13.5) and Equation 13.4 is really Vs0 = Wc h f− e e (13.6) As seen by the voltmeter this is Vs = h Wa f− e e (13.7) The above discussion suggests that the measured intercept should be regarded with some suspicion. However, the slope determination is not affected. It also suggests that the transition of the photocurrent to zero as the stopping potential is increased will be gradual rather than abrupt because the photoelectrons arise from a population of conduction electrons with widely varying energies. Some electrons will manage to cross from cathode to anode on thermal energy alone. This is thermionic emission. Since this current flows even without light, it is also called dark current. At room temperature the dark current is very small. Another obscuring phenomenon is that over time the anode ring becomes contaminated with cathode material. Now the anode will also 5 3 4 Wa eVs0 5 2 Wc eVs Anode Fermi Level 1 0 Cathode Fermi Level Figure 13.3: Energy Levels 0) Photon Arrives 1) Photoelectron overcomes cathode Fermi energy 2) Photoelectron overcomes cathode surface barrier 3) Photoelectron overcomes stopping potential V’ 4) Photoelectron attracted by surface potential 5) Electron moves into the conduction band emit photoelectrons when illuminated. This is rectified by heating the anode until it begins to glow light red. Both ends of the anode are connected to an Anatek power supply capable of delivering 2 Amperes. Note that under normal operation one side of the anode is left unconnected. The procedure should be done in a darkened room while carefully observing the anode. The entire process does not last longer than 15 seconds. This procedure can only be carried out by qualified lab staff. Input White Light (Hot Tungsten-Halogen) Figure 13.4: Light path of the monochromator 50 micron Entrance Slit 45 degree mirror Tiltable reflection grating 45 degree mirror Main parabolic mirror 50 micron exit slit Output monochromatic light The photocell must be illuminated with monochromatic light for meaningful results. The method chosen for generating such light in this experiment is called a monochromator. It has the advantage that a large number of frequencies can be easily generated. This permits a careful examination of Equation 13.7. The light path of the monochromator is shown in Figure 13.4. In effect, it is a reflection grating spectrometer that is connected backwards. It generates monochromatic light from a source instead of analyzing one frequency of light from a source as a spectrometer would. The source used is an ordinary Tungsten-Halogen lamp. This lamp generates light from the far infrared into the ultraviolet. To select a given wavelength, a knob ro6 tates the grating. Special gears couple this rotation to a display that reads out the wavelength chosen in nanometers. The output from the monochromator is not truly monochromatic. The output spectral width is roughly 1 nanometer. The photocurrents to be measured in this experiment are on the order of picoamperes (10−12 Amperes). At these low current levels, special precautions must be taken to obtain valid measurements. Materials that are normally considered to be insulators become conductors instead. The reason is because a source of picoampere current at one volt potential has an effective resistance of 1012 Ω. This resistance is comparable to the resistance of many common insulators such as paper, rubber, and plastic. Instead of insulating the circuit, these materials act like ordinary resistors and become part of the circuit. To help with low current measurements, the wiring should be as short a possible. This minimizes the amount of insulator present and reduces the area available for noise pickup. The electrometer is designed with this in mind. The sensing preamplifier head is separate from the rest of the instrument. In this way the sensing head can be placed very close to the source to be measured using short cables. The photocell cathode is directly connected to the electrometer sensor head with a short 20 cm cable. Materials under mechanical motion or stress exhibit charge imbalances that manifest themselves as currents. These are called piezoelectric effects. Frictional effects such as when two materials rub against each other also produce charge displacements. These are called triboelectric effects. To eliminate these sources of error, motion, vibration, and mechanical stress must be prevented in all components, connections, and wiring. Very high resistance materials like sapphire, quartz, and Teflon should be used where possible. These have volumetric resistances on the order of 1017 Ω. The electrometer head is insulated with sapphire. However, cleanliness is important. Contaminants such as dust, moisture, grease, fingerprints, and salt provide paths for surface leakage currents. Do not touch circuit components or wires by hand. Use a tissue or rubber gloves instead. Lastly, reduce stray electrical fields by reducing air currents and the motion of nearby people. Articles that generate strong static electric fields like sweaters, furs, coats, or long hair should be removed from the low current measurement area. Experimental Procedure Note: The room lights must remain off for the duration of this experiment. 7 1. The first step is to initialize and check the electrometer. No adjustments are needed on the remote preamplifier near the photocell. Short the input by engaging the input shorting switch (this is the up position). This switch is useful for momentarily turning off the meter input when experimental adjustments need to be made. Turn on the unit by setting the function switch to the + current setting. Allow a warm up time of 10 minutes. The electrometer measures currents by reading the voltage across one of three large resistors whose values are specified on the instrument cover. Under normal experimental conditions only R2 is required, except for measuring 10 nA where R1 is needed. Set the input resistor switch to R2. The meter movement and the range switch determine the voltage measured across R2. The current is then found simply from Ohm’s law. Turn the range switch to the 1 V range. After the instrument has warmed up, adjust the zero controls until the meter reads zero on the 1 mV range with the input shorted. Put the range switch back to 1 V to reduce the chance of an overflow. Using a tissue (not hands) disconnect the photocell cable from the input and connect the 10 nA current source instead. Measure the current output from each of the three current sources using the electrometer. The current is measured by turning off the shorting switch and reducing the range switch until the meter registers the largest voltage possible without going out of range. If the three current readings are within the correct orders of magnitude as specified on the current source then the electrometer is operating properly. Reconnect the photocell cable (remember, no fingerprints). Always leave the input shorting switch engaged except when taking a measurement. 2. Turn on and check the adjustable stopping potential. Turn on the multimeter and the power supply. Set the power supply to 10.0 V. This voltage remains unchanged for the rest of the experiment. Check that the meter reads the output of the decade divider correctly and that each knob alters the reading by 1 V, 0.1 V, and 0.01 V. Set all knobs on the divider to zero. 3. The monochromator is aligned and adjusted correctly. No adjustments are necessary. Do not bump, jar, or move the monochromator. However a performance test is always appropriate. Power up the laser and shine it into the entrance slit. The laser wavelength is 632.8 nm. Rotate the grating until the laser light is visible at the exit slit. Take note of the monochromator reading of the laser line. This serves as a monochromator offset calibration which should be used for all later measurements. Remove the laser and slide the Tungsten-Halogen lamp forward until it touches the monochromator input slit. Turn on the lamp. The variac voltage for the lamp 8 must be set at 110 V, any higher and the lamp will burn out. With the room lights off, check that the colours visible from the exit slit are consistent with the monochromator wavelength reading. The experiment is now ready for operation. 4. Determine the current being emitted by the photocell. It may be negative, in which case the -current setting is required. This gives a baseline zero reading for the darkened photocell. You may want to think about what this current might be if there is one. 5. These measurements will have to be made in darkness. A small flashlight is used to read and operate the electrometer, divider, multimeter, and monochromator. Keep the flashlight beam away from the photocell. For as many wavelengths as you feel are necessary (at least 12), take measurements of the stopping potential of light with wavelengths ranging from 420 nm to 600 nm. Use a consistent criterion to detect when the photocurrent has stopped. The best method is to simply adjust the divider until the needle reads zero, without changing the range setting of the electrometer. The Fluke multimeter reads out the potential Vs . The monochromator dial indicates the wavelength in nm. Notice that the current jumps wildly when people move near the photocell or when the divider is adjusted. The method to use is to make a divider adjustment and then move away and stay still until the electrometer stabilizes. Make further adjustments to the decade divider as required until a zero current reading is obtained. 6. Perform one of the optional investigations. Error Analysis As discussed in the theory section, there are many variables that affect the outcome of this experiment which are not under the control of the experimenter. No error analysis for these effects is required. Once the monochromator offset is found using the laser, the maximum wavelength error over the 400 nm to 600 nm range will be ±1.0 nm. Estimate a reasonable error for the stopping potential. This will not be an instrument error. Rather, it will reflect the uncertainty of finding the actual zero current point that represents the stopping potential. For current measurements, the uncertainty is propagated from the voltage uncertainty (half the smallest division on the meter) and the resistor uncertainty. The resistor uncertainty can be estimated from the number of significant figures that specify the resistor values on the cover of the electrometer. For example, two significant figures implies an error on the order of ±5 in the next smaller digit position. The wavelength 9 error and stopping potential error will propagate to an error in the slope from which Planck’s constant is found. To be handed in to the laboratory instructor Prelab 1. List and briefly discuss three significant considerations when measuring very small currents. 2. Describe what is meant by photocell dark current. 3. The resistors R1, R2, and R3 together with the voltage range switch determine the currents the electrometer can measure. The range switch extends from a 30 V scale down to a 1 mV scale. The electrometer resistor values are R1 = 0.93 × 108 Ω, R2 = 0.92 × 1010 Ω, and R3 = 0.90 × 1012 Ω. What is the largest and smallest current range on the electrometer? Write your answer once with scientific notation and once with proper SI prefixes. Data Requirements 4. Record your observations of the current measured by the electrometer when you bend, twist, and/or vibrate the wire connecting the photocell to the input of the electrometer. Note, do NOT exert large forces or displacements on the wire when making these observations, it is not necessary and damages the apparatus. 5. A table of values with uncertainties for the three reference current sources as well as the dark photocell current reading. 6. A value for the wavelength of laser light as measured using the monochromator. A table of the colors observed versus their wavelength from the Tungsten-Halogen lamp. 7. Table of values for the stopping potentials, wavelengths, frequencies and their uncertainties. Include the measured current with a stopping potential of zero (dark current). 8. A graph of stopping potential versus frequency with error bars, and a determination of the slope and intercept (with uncertainties). 9. Any one of the following: (a) Glass can reflect ultraviolet radiation but not transmit it. Quartz can transmit and reflect ultraviolet light. The Tungsten-Halogen bulb is made from quartz. The photocell and the monochromator are made from glass. Take readings on stopping potentials from 10 420 nm to 260 nm. Report and explain your observations. What is the minimum change needed to make this experiment work in the ultraviolet light range? (b) Design and implement an experiment to check whether the stopping potential really is independent of light intensity but the photocurrent really is not. Report your observations and conclusions. (c) Design and implement an experiment to measure the intensity of the Tungsten-Halogen lamp at different wavelengths. Present your observations and conclusions. (d) For one given wavelength, plot photocurrent versus stopping potential. Include a table of values with your graph. Discuss whether your data supports the assertion that raising the stopping potential retards the photocurrent. Discussion 10. Based on your graph in #8 above, discuss what the slope represents. From your data, determine an experimental value for Planck’s constant and compare this to the accepted value. Briefly discuss in your own words why the value you calculated for the intercept is likely not an accurate measurement of the work function for the photocathode material. 11 12