Title: Franck Hertz experiment
1Franck Hertz experiment
- 6B Tam Fei Ying(22)
- Pang Sze Man(28)
2- Glass tube contains mercury vapour at low
pressure - Hot cathode (emitter) C emits electrons by
thermionic emission.
3- Grid G is at a ve potential V relative to C
- The plate (anode) P is at a small -ve potential V
relative to G.
4Thermoelectrons accelerated by ve grid potential
- Most of e- pass through the grid
- Travel towards to plate
- Micro-ammeter measures the current I
- The current I as the accelerating voltage V
is increased until V4.9 where there is a sudden
drop. - I a gain
- Another sudden drop at V9.8V
5Electron collide with mercury atomslose energy
of incident electrons
- In an elastic collision,
- Total KE conserved.
- Mercury atom massive gtgt electron
- Carries always negligible KE
- Almost no K.E. loss of electron
- Inelastic collision
- some KE lost ?converted into the energy
inside the mercury atom - recoil of the mercury atom is
negligible - ?amount of KE lost by e- gain in E inside
the mercury atom. -
6- Almost all the mercury atoms are in the ground
state.
- When K.E. max of C lt 4.9eV
- When an electron hits a mercury atom, there is
no way for it to excite the atom.
- All collisions are elastic. (the energy of the
electron is not lost to the atom).
- The electrons go through the grid with the
original energy. The energy is
enough to overcome the retarding p.d.(Vr).
- The electrons are gain energy.
7 e- collides with mercury atom enough KE ? ?
the atom into 1st excited state.
After inelastic collision,this amount of E is not
enough to overcome the Vr. the current shows a
sharp drop. (line a)
The p.d. V for every sharp drop marks an
allowed value of energy absorption for the atom.
- The sharp drop at 6.7V corresponds to the
transition indicated by line b.
8The values of the p.d. for the transitions (I.e.
4.9V and 6.7V) -? excitation potentials of this
atom.
The corresponding energies (4.9eV and 6.7eV) are
called excitation energies.
9- A sharp drop in current at V(6.7-4.9)V1.8V
- At this voltage , enough E to raise the atom
- from 1st excited state ? 2nd excited state.
(line c)
- The drop is not observed because at ordinary T
- extremely few mercury atoms in 1st excited
state.
10- After a mercury atom has been raised to an
excited state - ? ? back down in a relatively short time.
- The excess energy can be released by emitting EM
radiation.
11THE END