ChargeAndFieldsSim: The Mass Spectrometer


    The charge accelerator (sometimes known as an 'electron gun') used in

    this simulation has been greatly simplified. It accelerates charged objects

    by exerting an electric force upon them. The output of a real accelerator might

    consist of thousands of objects of unknown mass, charge and velocity...

    the output of this simulated accelerator is just one object, where you,

    unlike the pioneers, know it's charge and mass. The energy lost by the

    electric field becomes the kinetic energy of the charge.


    The velocity selector (also known as a Wien filter) was developed

    by Wilhelm Wien in 1898. It contains an electric field crossed with

    a magnetic field in such a way that the only objects that can make

    it through the filter in a straight line are ones that are charged,

    and have a zero net force exerted on them (...the electric force is

    equal and opposite to the magnetic force), regardless of the value of

    the object's mass or the value of the object's charge. This occurs

    when the velocity of the charged object is equal to E/B. Charged objects

    that have a velocity that isn't equal to E/B have a curved path as they pass

    through the filter.


    Any charged object that passes through the hole in the right hand barrier

    has successfully made it though the filter in a straight line, thus the

    velocity of the charged object can be confirmed.

    It now passes into a magnetic field, where the radius of the charged object's

    object's path can be detected (a charge will 'expose' photographic paper if

    it hits the paper hard enough. The distance from the hole to the mark on the

    paper can be measured; this distance is the diameter of the circlular path

    of the charge).


    Knowing the the radius of this path, the speed of the charge, and the

    strength of the magnetic field, the 'charge to mass ratio', q/m, can be

    found. This was, and is, an important calculation, as it led to to the

    discovery of the charge and mass of the electron, which has had an

    enormous impact on our lives. Which sounds difficult to believe, but

    it's true :-).










For charge accelerator

   Kinetic energy = mv² / 2

   Work done by Electric field = VABq


For velocity selector

   FE = VAB / d

   FB = Bqv

   ∑F = (FE² + FB²)½

   ∑F = ma

   ∆x = vi∆t + ½a∆t²

   circumference = 2π r

   angle in radians = arc/radius

   sin θ = opposite / hypotenuse

   cos θ = adjacent / hypotenuse

   tan θ = opposite / adjacent


   The shape of a path of a charge in

   the selector that is not a straight

   line is called a 'cycloid'.




For magnetic field

   FB = Bqv

   ∑F on a mass moving in a circle = mv²/r














Close











copyright © Martin Kirby 2024        Q? A? [email protected]




   m : mass of charge (kilogram)

   v : velocity of charge (meters/second)

   E : Electric field strength (volts/meter or newtons/coulomb)

   B : Magnetic field strength (tesla)

   VAB : voltage (a.k.a. electric potential difference) (volts)

   VA : electric potential at A (volts)

   VB : electric potential at B (volts)

   q : charge (coulombs)

   FE : electric force on charge (newtons)

   FB : magnetic force on charge (newtons)

   ∑F: total force (newtons)

   a : acceleration (meters/second²)

   r : radius (meters)

   ∆x : change in position (meters)

   vi : initial velocity (meters/second)

   ∆t : change in time (seconds)



    • To be calculator and student friendly, the range of values chosen for

      this simulation have no exponents, unlike many of the real-world values that

      would be used for a real mass-spectrometer.


    • For this simulation, there are no gravitational forces.


    • The charge will only pass through the hole in the barrier if its path has

      been a continuous straight line from the accelerator to the barrier.


    • Assume that there are no edge effects.


    • This simulation is not to scale.

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gun electric field


gun voltage


gun seperation


gun length


exit velocity


selector magnetic field


selector electric field


selector voltage


selector seperation


selector length


b2 value


charge


mass


ChargesAndFieldsSim.html

charge accelerator

velocity selector

velocity selector removed

magnetic field

magnetic field removed

charge and mass

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charge accelerator








velocity selector











magnetic field






charge and mass




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