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The De Broglie Equation calculator computes the wavelength based on the Planck's Constant and momentum (p = m•v).
INSTRUCTIONS: Choose units and enter the following:
- (m) Mass
- (v) Velocity
Wavelength (λ): The calculator returns the DeBrogile wavelength in nanometers (nm). However, this can be automatically converted to other length units (e.g. angstroms) via the pull-down menu.
The Math / Science
The DeBrogile equation is:
where:
- λ is the DeBrogile wavelength
- h is Planck's Constant
- m is the mass
- v is the velocity
De Broglie combined Einstein's famous energy equation, E = mc2, and Planck's equation, E = hv, to create this equation. The DeBrogile equation uses Planck's Constant (h = 6.626 x 10-34 m2*kg/s) to calculate the wavelength associated with an object relating to its momentum (p = mv).
Example
Calculate the wavelength (in meters) of an electron traveling 1.24 x 107 m/s. The mass of an electron is 9.11 x 10-28 g.
Define variables:
- h = Planck's constant (6.626 x 10-34 m2*kg/s)
- m = 9.11 x 10-28 g = 9.11 x 10-31 kg
- v = 1.24 x 107 m/s
Substitute values into the De Broglie Equation:
λ = h/mv
λ = (6.626 x 10-34 m2*kg/s) / (9.11 x 10-31 kg) (1.24 x 107 m/s)
λ = 5.86 x 10-11m = 0.0586 nm
Supplemental Material
ChemWiki (UCDavis) : De Broglie Equation (with example)
References
Whitten, et al. "Chemistry" 10th Edition. Pp. 144