Q.54 The potential difference to accelerate an electron was quadrupled. By what factor does the de Broglie wavelength of the electron beam change?

Q.54 The potential difference to accelerate an electron was quadrupled. By what
factor does the de Broglie wavelength of the electron beam change?

Core Concept

The de Broglie wavelength λ for an electron accelerated through potential V is λ = h / √(2m e V), where h is Planck’s constant, m is electron mass, and e is electron charge. Kinetic energy gained equals eV, so momentum p = √(2m e V) and λ ∝ 1/√V.

Detailed Derivation

Electron starts from rest, gains kinetic energy KE = eV = (1/2) m v², so velocity v = √(2 e V / m). Momentum p = m v = √(2 m e V), thus λ = h / p = h / √(2 m e V). Initially λ₁ ∝ V₁^{-1/2}; new λ₂ ∝ (4 V₁)^{-1/2} = (1/2) V₁^{-1/2}. Ratio λ₂ / λ₁ = 1/2.

Option Analysis

Typical CSIR NET-style options: (A) 4, (B) 2, (C) 1/2, (D) 1/4.

  • (A) 4: Wrong—inverse relation, wavelength shrinks with higher speed/energy.
  • (B) 2: Wrong—matches doubling of V (√2 ≈ 1.41, but here quadrupled).
  • (C) 1/2: Correct—1/√4 = 1/2, wavelength halves.
  • (D) 1/4: Wrong—would apply if λ ∝ 1/V, but it’s 1/√V.

Formula Breakdown

Start with de Broglie relation: λ = h / p. For acceleration through V, p = √(2 m e V), so λ = h / √(2 m e V). Quadrupling V (to 4V) makes new wavelength λ’ = h / √(2 m e (4 V)) = λ / 2.

CSIR NET Relevance

This matches exam patterns like IIT JAM BT 2022, emphasizing non-relativistic approximations (valid for typical voltages). Common pitfalls: confusing with kinetic energy doubling (1/√2) or linear 1/V scaling. Practice verifies electron wavelengths (~0.1 nm) suit diffraction experiments.

 

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