The ionisation energy of gold is 890.1 kJ/mol. Is light with a wavelength of 225 nm capable of ionising a gold atom ?

1 Answer
Feb 28, 2015

No it is not.

Ionisation energy refers to:

#Au_((g))rarrAu_((g))^++e#

1 mole requires #890.1"kJ" =8.901xx10^5"J"#

1 atom requires #(8.901xx10^5)/(6.02xx10^(23))"J"#

#=1.478xx10^(-18)"J"#

To find the energy of the photon we use:

#E=hf#

To get the frequency of the photon we use :

#c=flambda#

#c# is the speed of light #=3xx10^(8)"m/s"#

So #f=c/lambda=(3xx10^8)/(225xx10^(-9)#

#f=1.333xx10^(15)s^(-1)#

So #E=6.63xx10^(-34)xx1.333xx10^(15)"J"#

#E=8.84xx10^(-19)"J"#

So you can see that this falls short of the energy required to ionise the gold atom as it is less than #1.487xx10^(-18)"J"#.