* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Millikan Oil Drop Experiment
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Lab Manual General Physics Lab (International Campus) Department of PHYSICS YONSEI University Millikan Oil Drop Experiment Ver.20160901 [International Campus Lab] Millikan Oil Drop Experiment Objective Determine the charge of an electron by observing the effect of an electric field on a cloud of charged oil droplets. Theory ----------------------------- Reference -------------------------- Young & Freedman, University Physics (14th ed.), Pearson, 2016 23. Electric Potential – Problem 23.81 (p.807) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- The droplets can be observed through a viewing scope with illumination by the bright light of a lamp. The scope has reticle marks spaced to 0.1mm, so the velocity of the falling or rising drop can be calculated. In 1909, Robert Millikan conducted the oil drop experiment to determine the charge of an electron. He suspended tiny charged droplets of oil between two metal electrodes by balancing downward gravitational force with upward electric force. The density of the oil was known, so he could determine the droplets’ masses from their observed radii. Using the known electric field and the value of gravity and mass, he determined the charge on oil droplets in mechanical equilibrium. By repeating the experiment, he confirmed that the charges were all multiples of some fundamental value. He proposed that this value was the charge of a single electron. The figure 1 shows a simplified scheme of Millikan’s oil drop experiment. A fine mist of oil droplets is sprayed into the chamber and some droplets enter the space between the plates. The droplets become electrically charged by an ionizing radiation source such as an X-ray or electrical discharges. By applying a potential difference across a parallel pair of horizontal metal plates, a uniform electric field is created in the space between them. The electric field can be controlled Fig 1 (a) Simplified scheme of the Millikan oil drop experiment. (b) Forces on a falling drop. (plates not charged) (c) Forces on a rising drop. (plates charged) by changing the voltage across the plates. Lab Office (Int’l Campus) Room 301, Building 301 (Libertas Hall B), Yonsei University 85 Songdogwahak-ro, Yeonsu-gu, Incheon 21983, KOREA (☏ +82 32 749 3430) Page 1 / 13 Lab Manual General Physics Lab (International Campus) Department of PHYSICS YONSEI University Millikan Oil Drop Experiment Ver.20160901 Figure 1(b) shows the forces acting on a droplet when it is The velocities and of the equation (5) can be meas- falling in air. The velocity of drop has reached its terminal ured experimentally and only the radius velocity remains unknown. in a few milliseconds for the droplets used in this experiment. The frictional force velocity of the drop, where of the oil droplet is proportional to the is the coefficient of friction be- tween the air and the drop. Since the gravitational force and the frictional force are equal and opposite, The frictional force in figure 1 actually results from the viscosity between the oil and the air. The viscous force on a small sphere moving through a viscous fluid is given by 6 (1) (6) Figure 1(c) shows the forces acting on the drop when it is Equation (6), known as Stokes’ law, is the frictional force rising under the influence of an electric field. The electric in- acting on the interface between a fluid and a particle, where ⁄ , where tensity is given by is the potential differ- ence across the parallel plates separated by a distance the charge on the droplet is is the viscosity, . If is the flow velocity relative to the object. (Millikan suggest- then there is an additional ed the corrected form of Stokes’ law with effective viscosity ⁄ 1 on it. If the sign and magnitude of the electric force is the radius of the spherical object, and , where is a constant and is the field are such to make the droplet rise, it will quickly acquire a atmospheric pressure. We will neglect this correction factor terminal velocity here, however, it is desirable to consider it for more accurate and the frictional force acts on it. Adding the forces vectorially yields analysis.) Now Equation (6) can be substituted for in equation (1). Substituting equations (4), (6) into equation (1) (2) In both cases, there is also a small buoyant force exerted by the air on the droplet. Since the density of air is only about 10 yields 4 3 6 or 9 2 (7) of that of oil, this force may be neglected. Substituting equation (7) into equation (5) and rearranging Eliminating from equations (1) and (2) and solving for the terms yields yields 1 To eliminate (3) 18 2 1 (8) from equation (3), we use the expression for : Charge carried by the droplet (C) the volume of a sphere : Potential difference across the plates (V) : Separation of the plates of the capacitor (m) 4 3 (4) : Density of oil (kg⁄m ) : Acceleration of gravity (m⁄s ) where is the radius of the droplet, and is the density of : Viscosity of air (Pa ∙ s N ∙ s⁄m ) (See appendix.) : Velocity of fall without E-field (m⁄s) the oil. Substituting equation (4) into equation (3) yields : Velocity of rise without E-field (m⁄s) 4 3 Lab Office (Int’l Campus) 1 (5) Room 301, Building 301 (Libertas Hall B), Yonsei University 85 Songdogwahak-ro, Yeonsu-gu, Incheon 21983, KOREA (☏ +82 32 749 3430) Page 2 / 13 Lab Manual General Physics Lab (International Campus) Department of PHYSICS YONSEI University Millikan Oil Drop Experiment Ver.20160901 Equipment 1. List Items Millikan Apparatus Qty. 1 Description Measures the elementary electric charge using a classical method of Millikan. Supplies voltage for the capacitor plates. Power Supply (Power cord included) Power Adapter 1 range 0 to 500 volts. 1 (for LED lamp) Patch Cords (High Voltage) (with safety shrouded banana plugs) Patch Cords (with banana plugs) Produces regulated DC power up to 50mA in a voltage 2 2 Supplies voltage for the LED lamp. Connect the power supply to the capacitor plates of the Millikan apparatus. Connect the multimeter to the thermistor of the Millikan apparatus. 886 kg⁄m Atomizer 1 Sprays oil droplets of density Multimeter 1 Measures voltage, current, and resistance. A-shaped Base 1 Support Rod 600mm 2 Vernier Caliper 1 Lab Office (Int’l Campus) Provide stable support for experiment set-ups. Measures external or internal diameter of an object with a precision to 0.05mm. Room 301, Building 301 (Libertas Hall B), Yonsei University 85 Songdogwahak-ro, Yeonsu-gu, Incheon 21983, KOREA (☏ +82 32 749 3430) Page 3 / 13 Lab Manual General Physics Lab (International Campus) Department of PHYSICS YONSEI University Millikan Oil Drop Experiment Ver.20160901 2. Details (1) Millikan Apparatus (2) Power Supply The power supply provides regulated DC power up to 50mA in a voltage range 0 to 500 volts. (4) Vernier Caliper The Vernier caliper measures external, internal diameter or depth of an object with a precision to 0.05mm. (3) Multimeter The multimeter measures voltage, current, and resistance. ① 22mm is to the immediate left of the zero on the vernier scale. Hence, the main scale reading is 22mm. ② Look closely for and alignment of the scale lines of the th main scale and vernier scale. In the figure, the aligned (13 ) line corresponds to 0.65mm 0.05 13 . ③ The final measurement is given by the sum of the two readings. This gives 22.65mm Lab Office (Int’l Campus) Room 301, Building 301 (Libertas Hall B), Yonsei University 85 Songdogwahak-ro, Yeonsu-gu, Incheon 21983, KOREA (☏ +82 32 749 3430) 22 0.65 . Page 4 / 13 Lab Manual General Physics Lab (International Campus) Department of PHYSICS YONSEI University Millikan Oil Drop Experiment Ver.20160901 Setup Setup 1. Equipment Setup (3) Reassemble the chamber. (1) Adjust the height of the platform. Mount the apparatus on two support rods on the A-shaped base with the viewing scope at a height which permits the experimenter to sit erect while observing the drops. (2) Measure the plate separation distance. Disassemble the chamber by lifting the Housing straight up and then removing the upper capacitor plate and spacer plate. Measure the thickness of the spacer (which is equal to the plate separation distance) with vernier calipers. Be sure that you are not including the raised rim of the spacer in your measurement. The flat cut (with black painted hole) of the spacer ring must face the viewing scope. _______________ m Make sure fit the electric discharge terminal into the groove on the underside of the spacer, and leave no gap between Caution the spacer and capacitor plates. To prevent electric shock, do not touch the plates inside the chamber while the power supply is turned on. Prior to Caution disassembling the chamber, you should be sure to turn off the power supply and rotate the plate charging knob to the Plate Grounded (middle) position. Lab Office (Int’l Campus) Be careful not to lose any parts of the chamber, especially the droplet hole cover. Room 301, Building 301 (Libertas Hall B), Yonsei University 85 Songdogwahak-ro, Yeonsu-gu, Incheon 21983, KOREA (☏ +82 32 749 3430) Page 5 / 13 Lab Manual General Physics Lab (International Campus) Department of PHYSICS YONSEI University (4) Turn on the LED lamp. Millikan Oil Drop Experiment Ver.20160901 Adjust the position of the lamp by using two lamp position knobs. Connect the 12V DC adaptor to the lamp power jack. The light is best focused when the right edge of the wire is brightest (in highest contrast compared to the center of the (5) Focus the scope and adjust the position of the lamp. wire). Remove the droplet hole cover. Unscrew the focusing wire from its storage place on the platform and carefully insert it into the hole in the center of the top capacitor plate. Return the focusing wire to its storage location on the platform. Bring the reticle into focus by turning the reticle focus ring. Complete the reassembly of the chamber by placing the View the focusing wire through the viewing scope and bring droplet hole cover on the upper plate and the lid on the hous- the wire into sharp focus by turning the droplet focusing ring. ing. (If you do not cover the droplet hole of the plate, the hole could be clogged with oil.) Lab Office (Int’l Campus) Room 301, Building 301 (Libertas Hall B), Yonsei University 85 Songdogwahak-ro, Yeonsu-gu, Incheon 21983, KOREA (☏ +82 32 749 3430) Page 6 / 13 Lab Manual General Physics Lab (International Campus) Department of PHYSICS YONSEI University (6) Realign the optical system while observing the droplets. Millikan Oil Drop Experiment Ver.20160901 (8) Connect the power supply to the plate voltage connectors. Move the air vent lever to the OPEN positon. Place the nozzle of the atomizer into the hole on the lid of the chamber and squeeze the atomizer bulb with quick squeeze. While viewing a shower of drops through viewing scope, realign the optical system. Caution To prevent electric shock, use ONLY safety patch cords with shrouded banana plug. Do not apply voltage to the thermistor connectors. (7) Determine the temperature of the chamber and calculate (9) Set the output voltage of the power supply. the viscosity of the air. Prior to turning on the power supply, set the plate charging knob to Plate Grounded (middle) position and rotate voltage adjustment knob fully counterclockwise 0V . Turn on the power and increase SLOWLY the output voltage to 300V. Connect the multimeter to the thermistor connectors and measure the resistance of the thermistor. Refer to the Sutherland’s Formula and the Thermistor Resistance Table (see appendix) to find the viscosity of air. _______________ Pa ∙ s Lab Office (Int’l Campus) Room 301, Building 301 (Libertas Hall B), Yonsei University 85 Songdogwahak-ro, Yeonsu-gu, Incheon 21983, KOREA (☏ +82 32 749 3430) Page 7 / 13 Lab Manual General Physics Lab (International Campus) Department of PHYSICS YONSEI University Setup 2. Stopwatch Software (1) Run Watchy software. Millikan Oil Drop Experiment Ver.20160901 (2) How to use the Watchy. [Start] or [F5] : Start the clock. [Stop] or [F6] : Stop the clock. [Reset] or [F7] : Reset the stopwatch to zero. Clear the log. [Lap] or [F10] : Add a lap time without stopping the clock. [Split] or [F11] : Add a split time without stopping the clock. [Split] records overall time at any given point, whereas [Lap] records elapsed time between splits. Procedure (2) Rotate the plate charging knob of the power supply to the Note Plate Grounded (middle) position. It is recommended you do not use any air conditioner or fan while performing your experiment. The airflow outside the chamber could affect the motion of oil droplets. The high velocity stream of air creates a region of lower pres- The plate charging knob changes the direction of the electric field between the plates. We will introduce the droplets into the chamber with no electric field by setting the knob to the Plate Grounded position. sure above the chamber lid, compared with standard atmospheric pressure inside the chamber. This pressure difference results in a net force pushing droplets up. Step 1. Setting the Plates Voltage (1) Set the potential difference across the parallel plates. Set the output voltage of the power supply to 300V or any desired value. (Do not exceed 400V.) _______________ V Lab Office (Int’l Campus) Room 301, Building 301 (Libertas Hall B), Yonsei University 85 Songdogwahak-ro, Yeonsu-gu, Incheon 21983, KOREA (☏ +82 32 749 3430) Page 8 / 13 Lab Manual General Physics Lab (International Campus) Department of PHYSICS YONSEI University Step 2. Introducing Droplets into the Chamber (1) Move the air vent lever to OPEN position. Millikan Oil Drop Experiment Ver.20160901 Step 3. Charging the Droplets The apparatus uses the piezo igniter to charge droplets. An applied mechanical stress on piezoelectric ceramic in the Move the air vent lever to the OPEN position to allow air to igniter generates a high voltage. The voltage produces an escape from the chamber during the introduction of droplets electric field in the gap between the end of the connected into the chamber. wire and the lower plate in the chamber. Free electrons in the gap are accelerated by the electric field. (2) Introduce the droplets into the chamber. As they collide with air molecules, they create additional ions and newly-freed electrons. The exponentially increasing electrons and ions cause regions of the air in the gap to become electrically conductive in a process called dielectric break- Note down and finally an electrical discharge or an electric spark The object is to get a small number of drops, not a occurs. large, bright cloud from which a single drop can be choThe ions or electrons produced during this process adhere sen. to the surface of oil droplets in differing numbers. ① To make oil droplets, squeeze the atomizer bulb with one quick squeeze. (1) Charge the droplets by pressing the piezo igniter. ② Then squeeze it slowly to force the droplets through the hole in the droplet hole cover, through the droplet hole in the top capacitor plate, and into the space between the two capacitor plates. Excessive use of the atomizer can cause too many drops to be forced into the viewing area and prevent ob- The droplets are charged with unknown charge. Some could servation of drops. Besides, repeated squirts of the atom- have many electrons (or positive ions), some a few, and izer can cause the plate hole to be clogged and fail to some could have no charge. If you find too few droplets have produce any drops in the viewing area. In such cases, net charges, press the piezo igniter again. turn off the power supply, disassemble the chamber, and then clean them with a soft tissue. (3) When you see a shower of drops, move the air vent lever to the CLOSE position. Lab Office (Int’l Campus) Room 301, Building 301 (Libertas Hall B), Yonsei University 85 Songdogwahak-ro, Yeonsu-gu, Incheon 21983, KOREA (☏ +82 32 749 3430) Page 9 / 13 Lab Manual General Physics Lab (International Campus) Department of PHYSICS YONSEI University Millikan Oil Drop Experiment Ver.20160901 Step 4. Selection of the Drop Step 5. Collecting Data on the Rise and Fall of the Droplet Measure the rise (plates charged) and fall (plates not (1) Select an appropriate droplet for your measurement. charged) velocities of the selected droplet about 5-10 times. As in the table below (which is calculated according to the 300V , The greatest accuracy of measurement is achieved if you 0.0074m , time from the instant that the droplet passes the reticle line A 25 ; the to the instant that the droplet passes the reticle line B (or C). values could be completely different on your experimental The distance between the reticle lines is 0.1 mm, so A and B conditions), a droplet that requires about 10 seconds to fall are 0.5 mm apart, and A and C are 1.0mm apart. Eq. (8) on the conditions of 886 kg⁄m , and 1.862 10 Pa ∙ s 0.5mm will rise the same distance in the 16.8 seconds if it has 3 excess electrons. Fall time s 10 12 14 16 18 20 Rise time s Charge 1 207 63.0 39.6 2 155 30.1 18.3 13.9 11.5 9.94 3 16.8 10.9 8.51 7.17 6.30 5.69 4 8.85 6.67 5.54 4.84 4.35 3.98 5 6.01 4.80 4.11 3.65 3.32 3.06 6 4.56 3.75 3.26 2.93 2.68 2.49 7 3.67 3.08 2.71 2.44 2.25 2.10 (1) With the plates not charged, start the stopwatch at the The fall velocity of a droplet (with no electric field) depends moment the falling drop passes the line A. on the size of the droplet. The rise velocity of a droplet (with an electric field) depends on both the size and the charge of (2) At the moment that the droplet reaches the line B or C, the droplet. record the lap time by clicking the [Lap] button of the stopwatch, and apply electric fields at the same time. Select a droplet that both falls slowly (about 10-20 seconds to fall 0.5mm) when the plate charging switch is in the plates (3) At the moment that the rising drop reaches the line A, rec- grounded position (plates not charged) and rises slowly ord the lap time again and stop applying electric fields at the (about 4-60 seconds to rise 0.5mm) when the plates charged. same time. If too many droplets are in view, you can clear out many of them by connecting power to the capacitor plates for several seconds. If you find that too few droplets have net charges to permit the selection of an appropriately sized and charged drop, press the piezo igniter again. When you find an appropriately sized and charged oil droplet, fine tune the focus of the viewing scope. (The oil droplet is in best focus for accurate data collection when it appears as a pinpoint of bright light.) Lab Office (Int’l Campus) Room 301, Building 301 (Libertas Hall B), Yonsei University 85 Songdogwahak-ro, Yeonsu-gu, Incheon 21983, KOREA (☏ +82 32 749 3430) Page 10 / 13 Lab Manual General Physics Lab (International Campus) Department of PHYSICS YONSEI University Millikan Oil Drop Experiment Ver.20160901 Step 6. Changing the Charge of the Droplet (4) Repeat step (2)~(3) 5~10 times. distance m Fall time s Rise time s It is desirable to observe as many different charges on a 1 single drop as possible. If the droplet is still in view, attempt to 2 change the charge on the droplet and measure the new rising 3 velocity many times, if possible. 4 5 (1) Bring the droplet to the bottom of the field of view using … the plate voltage switch. average (2) Rotate the plate charging switch to the charging position to the droplet to rise. (5) Calculate the average fall and rise velocities of the selected droplet. (3) Change the charge on the droplet by pressing the piezo igniter as described previously. _______________ m/s _______________ m/s If the rising velocity of the droplet changes, make as many measurements of the new rising velocity as you can. (4) Repeat Step 5. (6) Calculate the charge on the droplet. 18 2 1 (8) (5) If the droplet is still in view, repeat Step 6 as many times as you can. : Charge carried by the droplet (C) : Potential difference across the plates (V) : Separation of the plates of the capacitor (m) Step 7. Additional Measurement : Density of oil (886 kg⁄m ) : Acceleration of gravity (m⁄s ) : Viscosity of air (Pa ∙ s Repeat step 1 to 6 with other droplets. N ∙ s⁄m ) (See appendix.) : Velocity of fall without E-field (m⁄s) : Velocity of rise without E-field (m⁄s) If the result of this first determination for the charge on the Repeat the experiment with at least 20 different charge drop is too great, you should use slower moving droplets in through the steps 5~7. It is desirable to get as many data as subsequent determinations. you can. Lab Office (Int’l Campus) Room 301, Building 301 (Libertas Hall B), Yonsei University 85 Songdogwahak-ro, Yeonsu-gu, Incheon 21983, KOREA (☏ +82 32 749 3430) Page 11 / 13 Lab Manual General Physics Lab (International Campus) Department of PHYSICS YONSEI University Millikan Oil Drop Experiment Ver.20160901 Step 8. Analysis H G 1.629 1 1.629 I H 3.189 2 1.595 J I 4.962 3 1.654 The following tables show an example of alternative method _. ___ Average for calculating the charge of an electron. * Sample Table of Results Droplet A B C D E 10 6.287 8.051 1.523 1.608 11.268 Droplet F G H I J 10 17.613 3.072 4.701 7.890 12.852 * Sample Table of Final Analysis Droplet A B C D E Number of 4 5 1 1 7 Droplet F Number of 11 G H 2 3 I J 5 8 * Sample Table of Final Analysis Differences between charges B A 1.764 C B 6.528 D C E D F G 1 4 0.085 9.660 6 E 6.345 4 F 14.541 10 1.764 1.632 0 Note that the most precise value of the charge of an electron available at present is 1.610 1.586 9 1.602176487 40 10 C. 1.616 Appendix 1. Viscosity 2. Thermistor Sutherland’s formula can be used to derive the viscosity of an ideal gas as a function of a temperature A thermistor is a specialized resistor, intentionally designed to be thermally sensitive and its primary characteristic is its ability to alter its electrical resistance in response to changes in case temperature. The resistance of a 10kΩ thermistor at follows the table below. : Surtherland’s constant kΩ kΩ : input temperature (K) kΩ 0 27.616 26 9.6306 36 6.6859 5 22.266 27 9.2768 37 6.4535 10 18.066 28 8.9879 38 6.2304 15 14.748 29 8.6132 39 6.0162 20 12.110 30 8.3020 40 5.8104 21 11.650 31 8.0037 45 4.8965 22 11.210 32 7.7177 50 4.1454 291.15K 23 10.789 33 7.4435 60 3.0106 1.827 24 10.386 34 7.1805 80 1.6669 25 10.000 35 6.9281 100 0.97771 : reference temperature (K) : reference viscosity (Pa ∙ s) at reference temperature Surtherland’s constant and reference values for dry air are 120 Lab Office (Int’l Campus) 10 Pa ∙ s Room 301, Building 301 (Libertas Hall B), Yonsei University 85 Songdogwahak-ro, Yeonsu-gu, Incheon 21983, KOREA (☏ +82 32 749 3430) Page 12 / 13 General Physics Lab (International Campus) Department of PHYSICS YONSEI University Lab Manual Millikan Oil Drop Experiment Ver.20160901 Result & Discussion Your TA will inform you of the guidelines for writing the laboratory report during the lecture. End of Lab Checklist Please put your equipment in order as shown below. □ Delete your data files and empty the trash can from the lab computer. □ Turn off the computer. □ With the voltage adjustment knob set at zero, turn off the power supply and unplug the power cable. □ Unplug the dc adapter of the LED lamp. □ Assemble the chamber. (Be careful not to lose any parts of it.) □ Screw the focusing wire to its storage location on the platform. □ Place the atomizer into the holder on the platform. (Handle the atomizer with care. It is very fragile.) □ Do not unplug the high voltage patch cords. Lab Office (Int’l Campus) Room 301, Building 301 (Libertas Hall B), Yonsei University 85 Songdogwahak-ro, Yeonsu-gu, Incheon 21983, KOREA (☏ +82 32 749 3430) Page 13 / 13