The photoelectric effect is the emission of electrons from a material when it is illuminated by light of sufficiently high frequency. Each particle of light (photon) carries a discrete amount of energy. If a photon has enough energy to overcome the binding energy holding an electron in the material, that electron can be ejected from the surface as a photoelectron.
This phenomenon showed that light behaves not only as a wave but also as a stream of particles with quantized energy, helping to establish quantum mechanics. Albert Einstein explained the effect by proposing that the energy of a single photon is proportional to its frequency:
Photon energy relation:
where:
When this energy exceeds the material's work function, electrons can be emitted with some kinetic energy. The calculator on this page uses these relationships to estimate photon energy, electron kinetic energy, and the stopping voltage for a given metal and light source.
The core physics of the photoelectric effect can be summarized with a few standard formulas and physical constants.
When you know the frequency of the light, the photon energy is:
If you instead know the wavelength , photon energy can be written as:
Since the calculator expects wavelength in nanometers (nm), the internal conversion is:
The work function is the minimum energy needed to liberate an electron from the material's surface. In this calculator, you enter in electronvolts (eV). The corresponding threshold frequency (below which no electrons are emitted) is:
Here, is internally converted to joules using the factor .
Once photon energy exceeds the work function, the excess appears as kinetic energy of the emitted electrons:
If both and are expressed in electronvolts, the relation is especially simple:
If , the photon energy is too low and no photoelectrons are emitted in the idealized model used here.
In a typical experiment, you can apply a reverse potential difference to stop emitted electrons from reaching the detector. The minimum potential needed to reduce the photoelectric current to zero is called the stopping voltage . It is related to kinetic energy by:
When kinetic energy is expressed in electronvolts, it is numerically equal to the stopping voltage in volts:
The calculator reports this stopping voltage so you can connect the abstract energy values to a measurable electrical quantity.
This tool is designed for quick exploration of how different materials and light sources influence photoelectron emission. You can use it for classroom demonstrations, homework checks, or simple lab planning.
5e14 Hz or 400 nm.The main outputs you should expect are:
This example shows how the calculator's underlying steps might look if you performed them by hand. Suppose you illuminate sodium (approximate work function ) with violet light of wavelength .
First convert wavelength to meters:
Then compute photon energy using :
Multiplying the numerator:
Now divide by :
Use the conversion :
Now subtract the work function of sodium:
So in this idealized scenario, emitted electrons have a maximum kinetic energy of about 0.8 eV.
Because , the kinetic energy in eV is numerically equal to the stopping voltage in volts:
In other words, you would need to apply approximately 0.8 V of reverse bias to stop the photoelectrons produced by 400 nm light on sodium. The calculator carries out all of these steps for you automatically.
Different materials require different photon energies to emit electrons. The table below lists a few common metals, their approximate work functions, and the corresponding threshold wavelength (longest wavelength that can still cause emission).
| Material | Work function (eV) | Threshold wavelength (nm, approx.) | Threshold frequency ( Hz, approx.) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cesium (Cs) | 2.1 | ~590 | ~5.1 |
| Sodium (Na) | 2.3 | ~540 | ~5.6 |
| Calcium (Ca) | 2.9 | ~430 | ~7.0 |
| Zinc (Zn) | 4.3 | ~290 | ~1.0 |
| Copper (Cu) | 4.7 | ~260 | ~1.2 |
The threshold wavelength values are estimated using the relation
with converted from eV to joules. For wavelengths longer than , photon energy is lower than the work function and the idealized model predicts no photoemission. You can use these values as starting points when choosing example inputs for the calculator.
When you run the calculator, you will typically see:
If the calculator reports a negative or zero kinetic energy, it means that the photon energy is not sufficient to overcome the work function. Under those conditions, the model predicts no photoelectric emission, regardless of how intense the light is. Increasing intensity would only increase the number of incident photons, not their individual energies.
The calculator uses a simplified, textbook-style model of the photoelectric effect. Keep the following assumptions and limitations in mind when interpreting the results:
By being aware of these assumptions, you can better judge when the outputs are appropriate for your needs and when a more sophisticated model or direct measurement would be required.