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The is a fascinating phenomenon in conducting materials exposed to magnetic fields. It reveals crucial information about , helping us understand the behavior of and in various materials.

Velocity selectors and calculations demonstrate practical applications of the . These concepts are essential for understanding charge carrier dynamics and material properties, connecting electromagnetic theory to real-world applications in electronics and materials science.

The Hall Effect

Hall effect in conducting materials

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  • Phenomenon observed in conductors and placed in a magnetic field perpendicular to electric current flow
    • Generates a () perpendicular to both current and magnetic field
    • voltage is the potential difference across the conductor, perpendicular to current flow
  • Caused by the acting on charge carriers
    • Deflects charge carriers (electrons or holes) to one side of the conductor, creating a charge imbalance
    • Charge imbalance results in the Hall voltage
  • Significant in determining charge carrier properties in conducting materials
    • Sign of Hall voltage indicates type of charge carriers (electrons or holes)
    • Magnitude of Hall voltage is proportional to and
  • (RHR_H) relates Hall voltage to current, magnetic field, and conductor thickness
    • RH=EHJxBz=1neR_H = \frac{E_H}{J_xB_z} = \frac{1}{ne}, where EHE_H is Hall field, JxJ_x is current density, BzB_z is magnetic field, nn is charge carrier density, and ee is elementary charge
    • Sign and magnitude of Hall coefficient provide information about charge carrier type and density (semiconductors, metals)

Force balance in velocity selectors

  • uses combination of electric and magnetic fields to select particles with specific velocity
  • Electric field (E\vec{E}) and magnetic field (B\vec{B}) applied perpendicular to each other and particle motion direction
  • For particle with charge qq and velocity v\vec{v}, electric force (FE\vec{F}_E) and magnetic force (FB\vec{F}_B) act on particle
    • Electric force given by FE=qE\vec{F}_E = q\vec{E}
    • Magnetic force given by FB=qv×B\vec{F}_B = q\vec{v} \times \vec{B}
  • When electric and magnetic forces balance, particle passes through undeflected
    • Occurs when FE=FB|\vec{F}_E| = |\vec{F}_B|, or qE=qv×B|q\vec{E}| = |q\vec{v} \times \vec{B}|
    • Simplifies to E=v×B|\vec{E}| = |\vec{v} \times \vec{B}| or E=vBsinθE = vB\sin\theta, where θ\theta is angle between v\vec{v} and B\vec{B}
  • Adjusting electric and magnetic field strengths selects particles with specific velocity (mass spectrometry, particle accelerators)

Calculation of Hall voltage

  • Hall voltage (VHV_H) is potential difference across conductor in presence of magnetic field and electric current
  • Calculation requires current (II), magnetic field strength (BB), and charge carrier properties (density nn and elementary charge ee) of conductor
  • Hall voltage given by VH=IBntqV_H = \frac{IB}{ntq}, where tt is conductor thickness and qq is charge of carriers (positive for holes, negative for electrons)
  • Alternatively, use Hall coefficient (RHR_H) to calculate Hall voltage: VH=IRHBtV_H = \frac{IR_HB}{t}
    • Hall coefficient related to charge carrier density and elementary charge by RH=1nqR_H = \frac{1}{nq}
  • To calculate Hall voltage:
    1. Identify given values for current (II), magnetic field strength (BB), conductor thickness (tt), and either Hall coefficient (RHR_H) or charge carrier density (nn) and elementary charge (qq)
    2. If Hall coefficient not given, calculate using RH=1nqR_H = \frac{1}{nq}
    3. Substitute values into appropriate equation: VH=IBntqV_H = \frac{IB}{ntq} or VH=IRHBtV_H = \frac{IR_HB}{t}
    4. Solve for Hall voltage (VHV_H), ensuring consistent units throughout calculation

Charge carrier dynamics and material properties

  • : average velocity of charge carriers in response to an applied electric field
  • Mobility: measure of how easily charge carriers move through a material in response to an electric field
    • Related to and electric field strength
  • : measure of a material's ability to conduct electric current
    • Depends on charge carrier density, mobility, and charge
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© 2024 Fiveable Inc. All rights reserved.
AP® and SAT® are trademarks registered by the College Board, which is not affiliated with, and does not endorse this website.

© 2024 Fiveable Inc. All rights reserved.
AP® and SAT® are trademarks registered by the College Board, which is not affiliated with, and does not endorse this website.
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