Electronvolt

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Revision as of 10:29, 19 September 2009 by imported>Paul Wormer (New page: {{subpages}} The '''electronvolt (eV)''' is a unit of energy used in many branches of physics. One electronvolt is the amount of potential energy that one electron in an electri...)
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The electronvolt (eV) is a unit of energy used in many branches of physics.

One electronvolt is the amount of potential energy that one electron in an electric potential field Φ gains when the field Φ is decreased by one volt. The potential energy of an electron in potential Φ is equal to −eΦ, where e is the (positive) elementary charge.[1] Hence when ΔΦ is −1 (volt) the energy gain ΔE = e, and it follows that in SI units where joule is coulomb times volt:

1 eV = e (coulomb) × 1 (volt) = 1.602 176 487 × 10−19 (joule)

An equivalent definition of the electronvolt is: the increase in kinetic energy that a single unbound electron gains by passing through an electric potential difference of 1 volt in vacuum.

Note

  1. Value of e retrieved from Physics Today on September 19, 2009