The minimum frequency of incident electromagnetic radiation required to remove a photoelectron from the surface of a metal
The longest wavelength of incident electromagnetic radiation that would remove a photoelectron from the surface of a metal
Threshold frequencies and wavelengths for different metals
A useful analogy for threshold frequency is a fairground coconut shy:
The threshold energy + the kinetic energy of the photoelectron
E = hf = Φ + ½mv2max
y = mx + c
Ekmax = hf - Φ
Graph of maximum kinetic energy of photoelectrons against photon frequency
The graph below shows how the maximum kinetic energy Ek of electrons emitted from the surface of sodium metal varies with the frequency f of the incident radiation.
Calculate the work function of sodium in eV.
Step 1: Write out the photoelectric equation and rearrange to fit the equation of a
straight line
E = hf = Φ + ½mv2max → Ekmax = hf - Φ
y = mx + c
Step 2: Identify the threshold frequency from the x-axis of the graph
When Ek = 0, f = f0
Therefore, the threshold frequency is f0 = 4 × 1014 Hz
Step 3: Calculate the work function
From the graph at f0, ½ mvmax2 = 0
Φ = hf0 = (6.63 × 10-34) × (4 × 1014) = 2.652 × 10-19 J
Step 4: Convert the work function into eV
1 eV = 1.6 × 10-19 J J → eV: divide by 1.6 × 10-19
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