Demonstrating the Photoelectric Effect (OCR A Level Physics)
Revision Note
Demonstrating the Photoelectric Effect
The photoelectric effect can be observed on a gold leaf electroscope
A plate of metal, usually zinc, is attached to a gold leaf, which initially has a negative charge, causing it to be repelled by a central negatively charged rod
This causes negative charge, or electrons, to build up on the zinc plate
UV light is shone onto the metal plate, leading to the emission of photoelectrons
This causes the extra electrons on the central rod and gold leaf to be removed, so, the gold leaf begins to fall back towards the central rod
This is because they become less negatively charged, and hence repel less
Observations of the Gold Leaf Experiment
Placing the UV light source closer to the metal plate causes the gold leaf to fall more quickly
Using a higher frequency light source does not change how quickly the gold leaf falls
Using a filament light source causes no change in the gold leaf’s position
Using a positively charged plate causes no change in the gold leaf’s position
Emission of photoelectrons happens as soon as the radiation is incident on the surface of the metal
Typical set-up of the gold leaf electroscope experiment
Explaining the Observations
Observation:
Placing the UV light source closer to the metal plate causes the gold leaf to fall more quickly
Explanation:
Placing the UV source closer to the plate increases the intensity incident on the surface of the metal
Increasing the intensity, or brightness, of the incident radiation increases the number of photoelectrons emitted per second
Therefore, the gold leaf loses negative charge more rapidly
Observation:
Using a higher frequency light source does not change how quickly the gold leaf falls
Explanation:
The maximum kinetic energy of the emitted electrons increases with the frequency of the incident radiation
In the case of the photoelectric effect, energy and frequency are independent of the intensity of the radiation
So, the intensity of the incident radiation affects how quickly the gold leaf falls, not the frequency
Observation:
Using a filament light source causes no change in the gold leaf’s position
Explanation:
If the incident frequency is below a certain threshold frequency, no electrons are emitted, no matter the intensity of the radiation
A filament light source has a frequency below the threshold frequency of the metal, so, no photoelectrons are released
Observation:
Using a positively charged plate causes no change in the gold leaf’s position
Explanation:
If the plate is positively charged, that means there is an excess of positive charge on the surface of the metal plate
Electrons are negatively charged, so they will not be emitted unless they are on the surface of the metal
Any electrons emitted will be attracted back by positive charges on the surface of the metal
Observation:
Emission of photoelectrons happens as soon as the radiation is incident on the surface of the metal
Explanation:
A single photon interacts with a single electron
If the energy of the photon is equal to the work function of the metal, photoelectrons will be released instantaneously
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