1 / 40

BUSINESS EXAM 2 THURSDAY NOVEMBER 4, 2010 MATERIAL COVERED: CHAPTERS 4, 5 & 6

BUSINESS EXAM 2 THURSDAY NOVEMBER 4, 2010 MATERIAL COVERED: CHAPTERS 4, 5 & 6 TIME: 7:00PM-8:00PM WHERE: (TO BE ANNOUNCED LATER) WHAT TO BRING: CALCULATOR, ONE PAGE OWN NOTES CONFLICT IN SCHEDULE? CONTACT ME TO MAKE SEPARATE TIME. wavelength. Visible light. Amplitude.

grimesm
Télécharger la présentation

BUSINESS EXAM 2 THURSDAY NOVEMBER 4, 2010 MATERIAL COVERED: CHAPTERS 4, 5 & 6

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. BUSINESS • EXAM 2 THURSDAY NOVEMBER 4, 2010 • MATERIAL COVERED: CHAPTERS 4, 5 & 6 • TIME: 7:00PM-8:00PM • WHERE: (TO BE ANNOUNCED LATER) • WHAT TO BRING: CALCULATOR, ONE PAGE OWN NOTES • CONFLICT IN SCHEDULE? CONTACT ME TO MAKE SEPARATE TIME

  2. wavelength Visible light Amplitude wavelength Node Ultraviolet radiation Chapter 6: Electromagnetic Radiation

  3. Short wavelength --> high frequency high energy Long wavelength --> small frequency low energy

  4. The electromagnetic spectrum.

  5. Which has the longest wavelength? • Infrared • Ultraviolet • X-rays • Radio waves

  6. Rank the following in order of increasing frequency: microwaves radiowaves X-rays blue light red light UV light IR light

  7. Waves have a frequency • Use the Greek letter “nu”, , for frequency, and units are “cycles per sec” • All radiation:  •  = c • c = velocity of light = 3.00 x 108 m/sec • Long wavelength small frequency • Short wavelength high frequency

  8. In a vacuum, the speed of light, c, is 3.00 x 108 m/s. Therefore, The Wave Nature of Light • The product of the frequency, n (waves/sec) and the wavelength, l (m/wave) would give the speed of the wave in m/s. • So, given the frequency of light, its wavelength can be calculated, or vice versa.

  9. The Wave Nature of Light • What is the wavelength of yellow light with a frequency of 5.09 x 1014 s-1? (Note: s-1, commonly referred to asHertz (Hz) is defined as “cycles or waves per second”.)

  10. The Wave Nature of Light • What is the frequency of violet light with a wavelength of 408 nm?

  11. What is the wavelength of WONY? What is the wavelength of cell phone radiation? Frequency = 850 MHz What is the wavelength of a microwave oven? Frequency = 2.45 GHz

  12. Metal cathode (-) vacuum window Anode (+) The Photoelectric Effect “Light” can cause ejection of e- from a metal surface. An anode (+) attracts e- Current is measured

  13. The Photoelectric Effect Einstein proposed that “light”: • is quantized. • behaves like a stream of massless particles. • G. N. Lewis later named them photons. • Imagine photons (balls) hitting e- embedded in glue. • If the E of the ball: • is low, it can’t eject an e-. • exceeds the strength of the glue, an e- is released Higher intensity = more photons (balls). If E > threshold, more balls eject more e-.

  14. Quantization of Energy Light acts as if it consists of particles called PHOTONS,with discrete energy. Energy of radiation is proportional to frequency E = h •  h = Planck’s constant = 6.6262 x 10-34 J•s

  15. E = h •  Relationships:

  16. Short wavelength light has: • High frequency and low energy • High frequency and high energy • Low frequency and low energy • Low frequency and high energy

  17. Rank the following in order of increasing photon energy: microwaves radiowaves X-rays blue light red light UV light IR light

  18. Energy of Radiation What is the frequency of UV light with a wavelength of 230 nm? What is the energy of 1 photon of UV light with wavelength = 230 nm?

  19. What is the energy of a photon of 525 nm light? • 3.79 x 10-19 J • 4.83 x 10-22 J • 3.67 x 1020 J • 8.43 x 1023 J

  20. Radio Wave Energy • What is the energy of a photon corresponding to radio waves of frequency 1.255 x 10 6 s-1?

  21. What is the energy of a mole of 230 nm photons? Can this light break C-C bonds with an energy of 346 kJ/mol?

  22. Does 1200 nm light have enough energy to break C-C bonds?

  23. Where does light come from? • Excited solids emit a continuous spectrum of light • Excited gas-phase atoms emit only specific wavelengths of light (“lines”)

  24. Light emitted by solids

  25. Light emitted by hydrogen gas

  26. The Bohr Model of Hydrogen Atom • Light absorbed or emitted is from electrons moving between energy levels • Only certain energies are observed • Therefore, only certain energy levels exist • This is the Quanitization of energy levels

  27. Emission spectra of gaseous atoms • Excited atoms emit light of only certain wavelengths • The wavelengths of emitted light depend on the element.

  28. Line spectra of atoms

  29. Energy Adsorption/Emission

  30. Constant = 2.18 x 10-18 J For H, the energy levels correspond to: Energy level diagram:

  31. Each line corresponds to a transition: Example: n=3  n = 2

  32. Explanation of line spectra Balmer series

  33. Bohr Model of the Hydrogen Atom • Heated solid objects emit continuous spectra. • Excited atomic gases emit line spectra. • Each element has a unique pattern.

  34. E = −RH n = 1, 2, 3. . .  1 n2 Bohr Model of the Hydrogen Atom Niels Bohr • Orbits the nucleus. • Different orbits are possible with different quantizedE values: Bohr (1913). The hydrogen e-: Rydberg constant 2.179 x 10-18 J If the e- has n = 1 (lowest, most negative E), the atom is in its ground state. If ionized (e- removed), n =  (E = 0).

  35. infrared emission n ∞ 3 2 1 0 -¹⁄9RH -¼RH visible emission Energy -RH • 500 600 700 • wavelength (nm) ultraviolet emission ultraviolet absorption Bohr Model of the Hydrogen Atom absorption: ΔE > 0, n ↑ emission: ΔE < 0, n ↓ Bohr’s model exactly predicts the H-atom spectrum.

  36. H-atom transitions: ΔE = −RH– 1 nf2 1 ni2 Bohr Model of the Hydrogen Atom Example Calculate the energy and wavelength (in nm) for an H-atom n = 4 → n = 2 transition.

  37. Bohr Model of the Hydrogen Atom Calculate E and wavelength (nm) for an H-atom n = 4 → n = 2 transition.

More Related