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Nanoelectronics Chapter 2 Classical Particles, Classical Waves, and Quantum Particles [email protected]@2015.3 1 Electron Double-Slit Experiment [email protected]@2015.3 2 2.1 Comparison of Classical and Quantum Systems • Classical physics is to describe the exact state of a particle, how fast it will travel at a certain instant of time. • Quantum mechanics: it is impossible to measure precisely both the position and momentum of a particle, theoretically impossible. • Quantum theory is truly a probabilistic theory. [email protected]@2015.3 3 2.2 Origins of Quantum Mechanics • Photoelectric effect: if light is incident on a metal, some energy carried by the light can be transferred to electrons at the metal’s surface, and the electrons gain enough energy to escape from the metal. • Kinetic energy of photo-emitted electrons does not increase as the intensity of light increases. • When the frequency of light increases, more energetic electrons were emitted. [email protected]@2015.3 4 2.3 Light as a Wave, Light as a Particle • Light as a particle or perhaps a wave – the early years • A little later – Light as a wave – Interference Ψ𝑇 = Ψ1 + Ψ2 = 𝑒 𝑖𝑘𝑑 + 𝑒 𝑖𝑘(𝐿+𝑑) = 𝑒 𝑖𝑘𝑑 (1 + 𝑒 𝑖𝑘𝐿 ) If kL = 0, 2π, 4π, … Ψ𝑇 = 2 If kL = π, 3π, 5π, … Ψ𝑇 =0 – Young’s Experiment – What to expect from Waves [email protected]@2015.3 5 Young’s Experiment Ψ𝑇 𝑒 𝑖𝑘𝑟1 𝑒 𝑖𝑘𝑟2 = 𝐴( + ) 𝑟1 from jth𝑟slit 2 to r is the distance j observation location on the screen [email protected]@2015.3 6 Finally, Light as a Quantum Particle • Young’s Experiment – one slit at a time |𝜓1 |2 + |𝜓2 |2 ≠ |𝜓1 + 𝜓2 |2 |𝜓1 + 𝜓2 |2 = |𝜓1 |2 + |𝜓2 |2 + 2𝑅𝑒(𝜓1 ∗ 𝜓2 ) • Young’s Experiment – What to expect with classical particles 𝐼𝑇 = 𝐼1 + 𝐼2 [email protected]@2015.3 7 Finally, Light as a Quantum Particle • Young’s Experiment and the Concept of Photons – one more time with light, but slowly. If the intensity is reduced enough, we would find that energy is not arriving continuously, but in discrete bursts, pointing to a particle-like nature of light. Photon: 𝐸 = ℎ𝑓 = ℏ𝜔 [email protected]@2015.3 8 Finally, Light as a Quantum Particle • Young’s Experiment – A very strange result concerning interference Light exhibits bot wave-like and particle-like behavior, is clearly neither a classical wave not a classical particle. We call this a quantum particle. [email protected]@2015.3 9 2.4 Electrons as Particles, Electrons as Waves • 2.4.1 Electrons as Particles - The Early Years It was found in late 1800s by J.J. Thomson. • 2.4.2 Electrons (and everything else) as Quantum Particles Louis de Broglie in 1923 suggested that all “particles” having energy E and momentum p should have wavelike properties, too. ℎ 𝑝 𝜆 = ; 𝑝 = ℏ𝑘; k is wavenumber, - matter waves, for 1Kg object: 𝜆 = 6.6 × 10−34 𝑚 [email protected]@2015.3 10 Electrons as Waves • The wavelength of a 1 eV photon: ℎ𝑐 𝜆𝑝 = = 1.24 𝜇𝑚 𝐸 • The wavelength of a 1 eV electron: ℎ 𝜆𝑒 = = 1.23 𝑛𝑚 2𝑚𝑒 𝐸 • Why we cannot see individual photon or the granularity of light flow? 1 uW light has 1012 photon/s [email protected]@2015.3 11 2.4.3 Further Development of Quantum Mechanics • Schrodinger’s equation • (In double-slit experiment) the wave 𝜓 of each photon interferes with itself in passing through the two slits. Or the photon pass both slits at the same time • Heisenberg uncertainty principle Δ𝑝Δ𝑥 ≥ ℏ/2 • Particles with integral spin: bosons, Particles with half-integral spin: fermions • Pauli exclusion principle: two or more identical fermions cannot occupy the same quantum state. [email protected]@2015.3 12 2.5 Wavepackets and Uncertainty • For a particle with mass m: 𝐸 = ℏ𝜔 = • Dispersion relations: 𝜔(𝑘) = • Phase velocity: 𝑣𝑝 = ℏ𝑘 2 2𝑚 ℏ𝑘 2 2𝑚 𝜔 𝑘 • It seems reasonable to model a quantum particle as being associated with a wavepacket, since a wavepacket exhibits wave-like behavior, viewed like a particles from a far distance. Δ𝑘 Δ𝑥 = 𝜋/2 [email protected]@2015.3 13 2.5 Wavepackets and Uncertainty • Δ𝑘 Δ𝑥 = 𝜋/2 • A wavepacket tightly confined in space Is made up of plane waves having a large Spread in wavenumbers, vise versa. • Group velocity: 𝑣𝑔 = 𝜕𝜔 |𝑘=𝑘0 𝜕𝑘 Wavepacket can change 𝜋 shape ∆𝑥 = 𝑣𝑔 𝑡 − 2∆𝑘 [email protected]@2015.3 14 2.6 Main Points • • • • • • Classical particles Quantum particle’s position and momentum Electron’s wavelength Idea of spin and Pauli exclusion principle Fermions and bosons Wavepacket concepts: phase velocity and group velocity [email protected]@2015.3 15 2.7 Problems • 2, 3, 4, 11, 12 [email protected]@2015.3 16