Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Chapter 22 Nuclear Chemistry Radioactive decay – An unstable isotope that undergoes spontaneous disintegration of a nucleus into a lighter nucleus (more stable) Radioisotopes Nuclei that undergo radioactive decay May produce one or more types of radiation 2 Natural Radioactivity Background radiation What occurs from natural sources >80% of radioactivity exposure 3 Types of Radiation Ionizing radiation – knocks electrons out of atoms or groups of atoms Produces charged species – ions Charged species that cause damage 4 Differences Between Chemical and Nuclear Reactions 5 Nuclear Equations Elements may change in nuclear reactions Total mass and sum of atomic numbers before and after must be the same MUST specify isotope 222 86 Rn He 4 2 218 84 Po http://www.theodoregray.com/PeriodicTable/Posters/index.html 6 Alpha Decay Nucleus loses particle Alpha particle will be on the right side of the arrow Mass decreases by 4 and atomic number decreases by 2 7 Beta Decay Nucleus loses particle Beta particle will be on the right side of the arrow No change in mass but atomic number increases by one 8 Electron Capture Nucleus absorbs an electron and then releases an X-ray Electron will be on the left side of the arrow Mass number stays the same and atomic number decreases by one 9 Positron Emission Loses a positron Equal mass but opposite charge of an electron Decrease in atomic number by 1 and no change in mass + 10 Gamma Radiation Release of highenergy photon Typically occurs after another radioactive decay No change in mass number or atomic number 11 Nuclear Chemistry Nuclear reaction – a reaction that affects the nucleus of an atom Nuclear radiation – particles or electromagnetic radiation emitted from the nucleus during radioactive decay 12 Nuclear Chemistry Nuclear equation parent nuclide 222 86 daughter nuclide Rn He 4 2 218 84 Po Parent nuclide – the heaviest nuclide in a decay series Daughter nuclide – the nuclide produced by the decay of the parent nuclide 13 5/20/09 Bellwork (pg. 68) Complete the following nuclear equations & name the particle that goes in the blank. 14 C 14 N + _____ 6 7 _______ 4 He + 229 Th 2 24 12 90 0 Mg e- + _______ -1 14 Nuclear Medicine Used for two purposes Therapeutic – treat or cure disease using radiation Diagnostic – obtain information about patient’s health 15 Uses of Radioisotopes Tracers Radioactive atoms that are incorporated into substances so that the movement of the substance can be followed Many different isotopes used Can measure specific things Iodine-131 to locate tumors in thyroid Selenium-75 to look at pancreas Gadolinium-153 to determine bone mineralization 16 Penetrating Power of Radiation The more mass the particle has, the less penetrating it is The faster the particle is, the more penetrating it is 17 Prevent Radiation Damage To minimize damage Stay a distance from radioactive sources Use shielding; need more with more penetrating forms of radiation 18 Nuclear Fission “Splitting the atom” Break a large nucleus into smaller nuclei Produces nuclei of lower mass than the reactants 19 20 21 22 Nuclear Chain Reaction Neutrons from one fission event split further atoms Only certain isotopes, fissile isotopes, undergo nuclear chain reactions 23 Nuclear Power Plants Provide ~20% U.S. electricity France >70% Slow controlled release of energy Need 2.5–3.5% 235U Problem with disposal of radioactive waste 24 25 Nuclear Fusion Reaction takes smaller nuclei and builds larger ones Also called thermonuclear reactions 4 H He 2 e 1 1 4 2 0 1 • Releases tremendous amounts of energy –1 g of H would release same as 20 tons of coal 26 27 28 29 30 Detection Methods Film Badges- worn by X-ray technicians Use film exposure to measure radiation exposure of people wearing the badge Geiger-Muller counters- uses electric impulses carried by gas Scintillation counters- convert light to an electric signal 31 Half-Life Time it takes for onehalf of the original elements to undergo radioactive decay Characteristic for each isotope 1 2n 32 Radioisotopic Dating Use certain isotopes to estimate the age of various items 235U half-life = 4.5 billion years Determine age of rock 3H half-life = 12.3 years Used to date aged wines 33 Carbon-14 Dating 99.9% 12C Produce 14C in upper atmosphere Half-life of 5730 years ~50,000 y maximum age for dating 14 7 N n C H 1 0 14 6 1 1 34 Half-Life 1. Phosphorus-32 has a half-life of 14.3 days. How many milligrams of phosphorus32 remain after 28.6 days if you start with 4.0 mg of the isotope? 35 Problems 2. How many milligrams remain of a 15.0mg sample of radium-226 after 6396 years? The half-life of radium-226 is 1599 years. Isotope name Original amount of isotope Half-Life of isotope Number of half-lives 36 t 3. The half-life of radium-224 is 3.66 days. What was the original mass of radium-224 if 0.0500g remains after 7.32 days? 37 38 t 4. The half-life of radon-222 is 3.824 days. After what time will 25% of a given amount of radon remain? 39