* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Chapter 9 Natural Radioactivity
Nuclear fission product wikipedia , lookup
Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy of proteins wikipedia , lookup
Radioactive decay wikipedia , lookup
Gamma spectroscopy wikipedia , lookup
Background radiation wikipedia , lookup
Isotope analysis wikipedia , lookup
Nuclear binding energy wikipedia , lookup
Isotopic labeling wikipedia , lookup
Fallout shelter wikipedia , lookup
Ionizing radiation wikipedia , lookup
Technetium-99m wikipedia , lookup
Nuclear transmutation wikipedia , lookup
Chapter 9 The Nucleus, Radioactivity and Nuclear Medicine 26 November 2013 Natural Radioactivity • Radioactivity – process by which atoms emit energetic particles or rays • Radiation – the particles or rays emitted – comes from the nucleus • Nuclear symbols – what we use to designate the nucleus – Atomic symbol – Atomic number – Mass number 1 Nuclear Symbols Recall the early chapters mass number number of protons and neutrons 11 5 B atomic symbol atomic number number of protons Writing Nuclear Symbols 11 5 B • This defines an isotope of boron • In nuclear chemistry often called a nuclide • This is not the only isotope of boron – boron-10 also exists – How many protons and neutrons does boron-10 have? • 5 protons, 5 neutrons 2 Three Isotopes of Carbon • Each nucleus contains the same number of protons • Only the number of neutrons is different • With different numbers of neutrons the mass of each isotope is different Unstable Isotopes • Some isotopes are stable • The unstable isotopes are the ones that produce radioactivity • To write nuclear equations we need to be able to write the symbols for the isotopes and the following: – alpha particle – beta particles – positrons – gamma rays 3 Alpha Particles • Alpha particle () – 2 protons, 2 neutrons • Same as He nucleus (He2+) • Slow moving, and stopped by small barriers • Symbolized in the following ways: 4 2 He2 4 2 He α 4 2 α Beta Particles and Positrons • Beta particles () – fast-moving electron • Emitted from the nucleus as a neutron is converted to a proton • Higher speed particles, more penetrating than alpha particles • The symbol is… 0 1 e 0 -1 β β 4 Gamma Rays • Gamma Rays () – pure energy (electromagnetic radiation) • Highly energetic • The most penetrating form of radiation • Symbol is simply… Half-Life • Half-life (t1/2) – the time required for one-half of a given quantity of a substance to undergo change • Each radioactive isotope has its own half-life – Ranges from a fraction of a second to a billion years – The shorter the half-life, the more unstable the isotope 5 Half-Lives of Selected Radioisotopes Properties of Alpha, Beta, and Gamma Radiation • Ionizing radiation – produces a trail of ions throughout the material that it penetrates • The penetrating power of the radiation determines the ionizing damage that can be caused • Alpha particle < beta particle < gamma rays 6