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Quantum Tunneling

Quantum mechanical tunneling allows particles like electrons to pass through barriers that they could not pass through classically. It occurs when a particle encounters a potential barrier that is finite in height and thickness. The particle's wavefunction extends into the barrier region, giving it a finite probability to be detected on the other side. Examples of tunneling include radioactive decay, where particles tunnel out of atomic nuclei, and scanning tunneling microscopes, where electrons tunnel between a tip and sample surface.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
54 views

Quantum Tunneling

Quantum mechanical tunneling allows particles like electrons to pass through barriers that they could not pass through classically. It occurs when a particle encounters a potential barrier that is finite in height and thickness. The particle's wavefunction extends into the barrier region, giving it a finite probability to be detected on the other side. Examples of tunneling include radioactive decay, where particles tunnel out of atomic nuclei, and scanning tunneling microscopes, where electrons tunnel between a tip and sample surface.

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cyrimathew
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QUANTUM MECHANICAL TUNNELING

Let us consider the case of a particle (say, an electron) confined to move in a one-dimensional box with
walls of infinite and finite heights as shown below. The potential energy function V is assumed to be zero from
x =0 to x = a. But the potential energy V is
taken as at x =0 and at x = a, as V 0
(potential energy is finite). Classically the
electron should be found within the
boundaries x = 0 to x = a, and the
Potential barrier
electron wavefunction
V= V0
probability of finding the electron beyond
of finite height
x = a is to be zero. But it is observed that
when the potential barrier is finite and of
Thickness of barrier
suitable thickness, there exists a finite V
probability of finding the electron beyond
x = a. The probability decreases
exponentially with increase in barrier
a
0
thickness. This phenomenon is known as
x
electron tunnel through barrier
tunneling. Tunneling is a quantum
mechanical phenomenon. Radioactive decay is an example of tunneling. It is the process of emission of particles and
energy from the unstable nucleus of an atom to form a stable product. This is done via the tunneling of a particle out
of the nucleus (an electron tunneling into the nucleus is electron capture). Another example is the working of
scanning tunneling microscope (STM). In STM, the region from x = 0 to x = a, could be considered as tip and the
region beyond the barrier as sample. The barrier thickness could be considered as the distance d between tip
and sample surface.

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