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In solid state physics, the work function is the minimum energy (usually measured in electron volts) needed to remove an electron from a solid to a point immediately outside the solid surface (or energy needed to move an electron from the Fermi energy level into vacuum). Here "immediately" means that the final electron position is far from the surface on the atomic scale but still close to the solid on the macroscopic scale. The work function is a characteristic property for any solid face[1] of a substance with a conduction band (whether empty or partly filled). For a metal, the Fermi level is inside the conduction band, indicating that the band is partly filled. For an insulator, the Fermi level lies within the band gap, indicating an empty conduction band; in this case, the minimum energy to remove an electron is about the sum of half the band gap, and the work function.
Photoelectric work functionThe work function is the minimum energy that must be given to an electron to liberate it from the surface of a particular substance. In the photoelectric effect, electron excitation is achieved by absorption of a photon. If the photon's energy is greater than the substance's work function, photoelectric emission occurs and the electron is liberated from the surface. (Excess photon energy results in a liberated electron with non-zero kinetic energy.) Photoelectric work function is
where h is the Planck's constant and f0 is the minimum (threshold) frequency of the photon required to produce photoelectric emission. Thermionic work functionThe work function is also important in the theory of thermionic emission. Here the electron gains its energy from heat rather than photons. According to the Richardson-Dushman equation the emitted electron current density J (A/m2) is related to the absolute temperature T by the equation: where W is the work function of the metal, k is the Boltzmann constant and the proportionality constant A, known as Richardson's constant, is given by where m and -e are the mass and charge of an electron, and h is Planck's constant. Thermionic emission --- electrons escaping from the heated negatively-charged filament (hot cathode) --- is important in the operation of vacuum tubes. Tungsten, the common choice for vacuum tube filaments, has a work function of approximately 4.5 eV; various oxide coatings can substantially reduce this. Free Electron Gas Model
In the free electron model non-interacting electrons bounce around inside a potential well of depth U. The Fermi Level is the highest energy level that is occupied by electrons. Here EF is defined relative to the bottom of the potential well, and the work function W is the energy required to eject the electron in the Fermi Level.
Work Function TrendsThe thermionic work function depends on the orientation of the crystal and will tend to be smaller for metals with an open lattice, larger for metals in which the atoms are closely packed. The range is about 1.5–6 eV. It is somewhat higher on dense crystal faces than open ones. The magnitude of the work function is usually about a half of the ionization energy of a free atom of the metal. For example, caesium has ionization energy 3.9 eV and work function 1.9 eV. Work Function and Surface EffectThe work function W of a metal is closely related to its Fermi energy It can be proven that if we define work function as the minimum energy needed to remove an electron to a point immediately out of the solid, the effect of the surface charge distribution can be neglected, leaving only the surface dipole distribution. Let the potential energy difference across the surface due to effective surface dipole be
Where ApplicationsIn electronics the work function is important for design of the metal-semiconductor junction in Schottky diodes and for design of vacuum tubes. MeasurementMany techniques have been developed based on different physical effects to measure the electronic work function of a sample. One may distinguish between two groups of experimental methods for work function measurements: absolute and relative. Methods of the first group employ electron emission from the sample induced by photon absorption (photoemission), by high temperature (thermionic emission), due to an electric field (field emission), or using electron tunnelling. All relative methods make use of the contact potential difference between the sample and a reference electrode. Experimentally, either an anode current of a diode is used or the displacement current between the sample and reference, created by an artificial change in the capacitance between the two, is measured (the Kelvin Probe method, Kelvin probe force microscope). Methods Based on PhotoemissionPhotoelectron emission spectroscopy (PES) is the general term for spectroscopic techniques based on the outer photoelectric effect. In the case of Ultraviolet Photoelectron Spectroscopy (UPS), the surface of a solid sample is irradiated with ultraviolet (UV) light and the kinetic energy of the emitted electrons is analysed. As UV light is electromagnetic radiation with an energy hf lower than 100 eV it is able to extract mainly valence electrons. Due to limitations of the escape depth of electrons in solids UPS is very surface sensitive, as the information depth is in the range of 2 – 20 monolayers (1-10nm). The resulting spectrum reflects the electronic structure of the sample providing information on the density of states, the occupation of states, and the work function. Methods Based on Thermionic EmissionThe retarding diode method is one of the simplest and oldest method of measuring work functions. It is based on the thermionic emission of electrons from an emitter. The current density J of the electrons collected by the sample depends on the work function W of the sample and is given by the Richardson–Dushman equation J = AT2e − W / kT where A, the Richardson constant, is a specific material constant. The current density increases rapidly with temperature and decreases exponentially with the work function. Changes of the work function can be easily determined by applying a retarding potential V between the sample and the electron emitter; W is replaced by W + eV in above equation. The difference in the retarding potential measured at constant current is equivalent to the work function change, assuming that the work function and the temperature of the emitter is constant. One can use the Richardson–Dushman equation directly to determine the work function by temperature variation of the sample, as well. Rearranging the equation yields ln(J / T2) = ln(A) − W / kT. The line produced by plotting ln(J / T2) vs. 1 / T will have a slope of W / k allowing to determine the work function of the sample. Electron Work Functions of The ElementsUnits: eV electron Volts
See also
References
As a book:
For a quick reference to values of work function of the elements:
External links*Some of the work functions listed on these sites do not agree!* |
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