The energy required to remove an electron from a surface of a
solid element is called its work function.
If a minimum of 431.3 kJ/mol is required to remove electrons from
Cu atoms on a surface of a sample of copper, what is the maximum
wavelength (λmax) of light that can remove an
electron from a Cu atom on this surface?
If the same copper surface is irradiated with light of λ=153.8 nm, what is the maximum kinetic energy that a released electron could have?
The energy required to remove an electron from a surface of a solid element is called...
The energy required to remove an electron from a surface of a solid element is called its work function. If a minimum of 360.9 kJ/mol is required to remove electrons from Al atoms on a surface of a sample of aluminum, what is the maximum wavelength (max) of light that can remove an electron from an Al atom on this surface?
It takes 208.4 kJ of energy to remove 1 mole of electrons from an atom on the surface of rubidium metal. How much energy does it take to remove a single electron from an atom on the surface of solid rubidium? J What is the maximum wavelength of light capable of doing this? nm
9. (15 points) Electrons are emitted from the surface of a metal when it's exposed to light. This is called the photoclectric effect. Each metal has a certain threshold frequency of light, below which nothing happens. Right at this threshold frequency, an electron is emitted. The binding energy of a metal is the minimum amount of energy required to remove an electron from the surface of the metal. The binding energy for lithium metal is 279.7 kJ/mol (that is, it...
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1. The work needed to remove an electron from the surface of sodium is 2.3 eV. Find the maximum wavelength of light that will cause photoelectrons to be emitted from sodium. What will be the speed of emitted electrons if light with wavelength 300 nm is used? 2. How much energy is required to remove an electron from the basic state of hydrogen, thereby producing an ion H'? 3. What is the de Broglie wavelength of a 2000-kg...
Molybdenum metal must absorb radiation with a minimum frequency of 1.09×10^15 s^−1 before it can emit an electron from its surface via the photoelectric effect. 1. What is the minimum energy needed to produce this effect? E = _______ J 2. What wavelength radiation will provide a photon of this energy? λ = ________ nm 3. If molybdenum is irradiated with light of wavelength of 120 nm, what is the maximum possible kinetic energy of the emitted electrons? E =...
It takes 497 kJ to remove one mole of electrons from the atoms at the surface of a solid metal. What is the maximum wavelength of light capable of doing this?
A metal surface has a minimum binding energy of 2.34x10-19 J/electron. An incident light of 345 nm wavelength was directed onto the metal. Answer the following questions: a. What is the frequency of the incident light? b. How much energy per photon is projected onto the metal surface? c. How much energy per mole is projected onto the metal surface? d. What is the kinetic energy given to one electron that is released from the metal from the photoelectric effect?...
- Why does it take energy to remove an electron from a metal surface? - Why are no electrons emitted from the surface of a metal if the frequency of light is below a threshold value? - How does application of the conservation of energy explain the dependence of electron kinetic energy upon the frequency of light shone on the metal surface. The subject is Physical CHEM ; Quantum mechanics
1. The work needed to remove an electron from the surface of sodium is 2.3 eV. Find the maximum wavelength of light that will cause photoelectrons to be emitted from sodium. What will be the speed of emitted clectrons if light with wavelength 300 nm used? What will be the speed of emitted electrons if light with 2-400 nm is used? low much energy is required to remove an electron from the basic state of hydrogen, thereby producing an ion...
A sample of hydrogen atoms is irradiated with light with a wavelength of 89.0 nm, and electrons are observed leaving the gas. If each hydrogen atom were initially in its ground level, what would be the maximum kinetic energy in electron volts of these photoelectrons? A few electrons are detected with energies as much as 10.2 eV greater than the maximum kinetic energy calculated in part A. How can this be?