wave nature of matter

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Wave Nature of Matter Light/photons have both wave & particle behaviors. Waves – diffraction & interference, Polarization. Acts like Particles – photoelectric effect, E = hf.

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Wave Nature of Matter. Light/photons have both wave & particle behaviors. Waves – diffraction & interference, Polarization. Particle – photoelectric effect, E = h f. de Broglie/Matter waves. If light behaves as a particle, then particles should behave like waves. Right? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Wave Nature of Matter

Wave Nature of Matter

Light/photons have both wave & particle behaviors.

Waves – diffraction & interference, Polarization.

Acts like Particles – photoelectric effect, E = hf.

Page 2: Wave Nature of Matter

de Broglie/Matter waves 1924

If light behaves as a particle, then particles should behave like waves. Right?

Particles also have , related to their momentum.

Where m = rest mass of the particle

Page 3: Wave Nature of Matter

Derive Eq Using E = mc2.what is the wavelength of matter

E = hf E = mc2 = mv2. hf = mv2. but f = v/ and v2. hv/ = mv2.Cancel v.h/ = mv mv = p. h/ = p = h/p

Page 4: Wave Nature of Matter

1: Find the of an electron accelerated through a p.d. of 30-V.

Find the e- velocityqV = ½ mv2.v = 3.2 x 106 m/s

Calculate . = h/p2.3 x 10-10 m.

Page 5: Wave Nature of Matter

Handy Equation

KE e- = 1/2 mv2 = p2/2m

For e- accelerated through pd eV = KE = p2/2m

Page 6: Wave Nature of Matter

De Broglie wavelength or “matter waves” are not physical.

They are not EM or mechanical waves but determine the probability of finding a particle in a particular place.

Page 7: Wave Nature of Matter

Evidence

Page 8: Wave Nature of Matter

Electrons diffracting through 2 slitsWhat does this pattern look like?

Page 9: Wave Nature of Matter

Electron diffraction

Davisson-Germer experiment: similar to xray diffraction

They know the e- speed thus know the deBroglie

Page 10: Wave Nature of Matter
Page 11: Wave Nature of Matter

Maximum intensity from wave diffraction pattern

Page 12: Wave Nature of Matter

Maxima observedFor e-. Diffraction pattern.

Can calc using position of min & max.

agrees with deBroglie from equation.

Results of Davisson-Germer experiment:Proof of deBroglie

Page 13: Wave Nature of Matter

2. A 70kg person is running 5 m/s. Find . How does the compare with the on the EM spectrum?

Page 14: Wave Nature of Matter

3. Find for an e- moving at 107 m/s. How does the compare with the on the EM spectrum?

Page 15: Wave Nature of Matter

Hwk Read Hamper 243 – 246 IB Set

Page 16: Wave Nature of Matter

Electron in a Box

Page 17: Wave Nature of Matter

Bohr Model of Atom

Electrons jump “oscillate” up & down to different energy levels absorbing or releasing

photons.

Bohr explains H well, not effective for larger atoms.

Page 18: Wave Nature of Matter

The atomic orbits of Bohr can better be visualized as e- oscillating in a box closed at both ends.

Picture that the de Broglie waves for e- are standing waves.

This helps explain why energy is quantized.

Electron in a Box

Page 19: Wave Nature of Matter

If e- viewed as standing waves the orbit model works better.

2L =

2L/2 =

2L/3 =

Since p = h/:

E = n2h2

8mL2.

Orbit n=1 ground Planck

Circular Diameter

Mass e-

Page 20: Wave Nature of Matter

De Broglie & e- in a box

The de Broglie of e- are the‘s of the standing allowed by the box;

since λ = 2L/n where n is an integerenergy is quantized;

Page 21: Wave Nature of Matter

If e- are standing waves. Only ’s that fit certain orbits are possible.

Page 22: Wave Nature of Matter

Fit a standing wave into a circular orbit

Circumference = 2r = n

deBroglie’s equation for the electron:

= h/mv

You get the equation for quantized angular momentum:

mvr = nh/2

Page 23: Wave Nature of Matter

’s that don’t fit circumference undergoes destruction interference & cannot exist.

Page 24: Wave Nature of Matter

IB Prb Electron in a Box

Page 25: Wave Nature of Matter

Schrodinger Model

Schrodinger used deBroglie’s wave hypothesis to develop wave equations to describe matter waves. Electrons have undefined positions but do have probability regions he called “electron clouds”. The probability of finding an e- in a given region is described by a wave function .

Schrodinger’s model works for all atoms.

Page 26: Wave Nature of Matter

Electron cloud

Page 27: Wave Nature of Matter

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-YYBCNQnYNM&feature=related

The structure of atoms

Page 28: Wave Nature of Matter

Heisenberg Uncertainty.

1927 Cannot make simultaneous measurements of position & momentum on particle with accuracy.

The act of making the measurement changes something.

The more certain we are of 1 aspect, the less certain we are of the other.

The total uncertainty will always be equal to or greater than a value:

Page 29: Wave Nature of Matter

x = Uncertainty in positionp =Uncertainty in momentum

Page 30: Wave Nature of Matter

If you know the momentum exactly, then you have no knowledge about position.

Another aspect to uncertainty is:

Et ≥ h/4.

E = energy J. t = time (s)

If a mass remains in a state for a long time, it can have a well defined E.

Page 31: Wave Nature of Matter

Example Problem

The velocity of an electron is 1 x 106 m/s ± 0.01 x 106 m/s. What is the maximum precision in its position?

5.8 x 10-9 m.

Page 32: Wave Nature of Matter

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hZ8p7fIMo2k

Heisenberg.

Page 33: Wave Nature of Matter
Page 34: Wave Nature of Matter

Mechanical universe.

Page 35: Wave Nature of Matter

The End for now.Minute Physics Heisenberg

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7vc-Uvp3vwg

Page 36: Wave Nature of Matter

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hZ8p7fIMo2k

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=groBKtfZfsA

Page 37: Wave Nature of Matter

HL stuff.

Page 38: Wave Nature of Matter

Constructive interference of e- waves scattered from two atoms occurs when d sin = m (m = 1, = 50o, solve for )

The angle depends on the voltage used to accelerate the electrons!Positions of max/min were similar to xray diffraction

Page 39: Wave Nature of Matter

KE of electron = 1/2 mv2 = eV = p2/2m

= the same that was found via the diffraction equation

Confirms the wave nature of electrons!

Page 40: Wave Nature of Matter
Page 41: Wave Nature of Matter

39.3 Probability and uncertainty

QM: a particle’s position and velocity cannot be precisely determined

Single-slit diffraction: << a 1 = angle between central max. and first minimumif 1 is very small, 1 = / a (RADIANS!)

Page 42: Wave Nature of Matter

Interpret this result in terms of particles:

tan1 = py / px So 1 = py / px py / px = / a

There is uncertainty in py = py

Can we fix this by making the slit width = a smaller?

py a > h

Page 43: Wave Nature of Matter

No, because making the slit smaller makes central max wider

Wide slit, py is well defined (~0)

narrow slit, py could be anything

Page 44: Wave Nature of Matter

h = h/2

Slit width a is an uncertainty in position, now called x

y = 1/x

Page 45: Wave Nature of Matter

The longer the lifetime t of a state, the smaller its spread in energy E.

A state with a “well-defined” energy

A state with a “poorly-defined” energy

Page 46: Wave Nature of Matter

Two-slit interference

Page 47: Wave Nature of Matter

With light…

Page 48: Wave Nature of Matter

Electrons diffracting through 2 slits

Page 49: Wave Nature of Matter

39.4 Electron microscope

Better resolution because e- wavelengths << optical photons

Microscope resolution ~ 2 x wavelength

Scanning electron microscope:• e- beam sweeps across a specimen• e- are knocked off and collected• Specimen can be thick• Image appears much more 3-D than a

regular microscope

Page 50: Wave Nature of Matter

SEM image

Page 51: Wave Nature of Matter
Page 52: Wave Nature of Matter

TEM image of a bacterium

Page 53: Wave Nature of Matter

Two waves with different wave numbers k = 2

In reality, wave functions are localized: combinations of 2 or more sin & cos functions

ph

k

Page 54: Wave Nature of Matter

A wave packet: particle & wave properties

(x,y,z) A(k)e ikx

dk

Page 55: Wave Nature of Matter

Does a wave packet represent a stationary state?

A stationary state

• Has a definite energy (meaning, no uncertainty, only 1 value of E)

• * is independent of time• * = |(x,y,z)|2

(x,y,z) A(k)e ikx

dk

Page 56: Wave Nature of Matter