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Announcements & Agenda (01/17/07) You should currently be reading Ch 3 & starting Ch 4, which will be relevant to lab next week I thought the quiz was… 0% 0% Today: More on Subatomic Particles (3.5) Isotopes & Atomic Mass (3.6) Radiation (Ch 9 – only responsible for notes) 0% 0% 0% 1 Last Time: Classification of Matter 1 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 2 A piece of cake. Manageable. Not too easy or difficult (what I expected). Challenging! Oh my goodness!!! 3 4 5 2 Last Time: Know These Elements O 65.0 % C 18.0 H 10.0 N 3.0 Ca 1.4 P 1.0 Mg 0.50 3 K S Na Cl Fe Zn 0.34 0.26 0.14 0.14 0.004 0.003 Trace Elements As, Cr, Co, Cu, F, I, Mn, Mn, Mo, Ni, Se, Si, Si, V 4 1 Last Time: Atoms Rearrange in Chemical Reactions Subatomic Particles Atoms contains subatomic particles, • protons have a positive (+) charge. • electrons have a negative ((-) charge. • like charges repel and unlike charges attract. attract. • neutrons are neutral. Methane (CH4) reacts with oxygen (O2) to produce carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O). COUNT THE ATOMS! SEE BOB DEMO! 5 6 Atomic Mass Scale Structure of the Atom On the atomic mass scale for subatomic particles, • dense nucleus that contains protons and neutrons. • of electrons in a large empty space around the nucleus. • 1 atomic mass unit (amu) has a mass equal to 1/12 of the mass of the carboncarbon-12 atom. • a proton has a mass of about 1 (1.007) amu. • a neutron has a mass of about 1 (1.008) amu. • an electron has a very small mass, 0.000549 amu. 7 8 2 Summary Atomic Number = The Identity of the Element Counts the number of protons in an atom 9 10 All Atoms of the Same Element Have the Same # of Protons!!! 11 protons Symbol 11 Na 11 www.webelements.com 12 3 Electrons in An Atom Mass Number An atom of • an element is electrically neutral; the net charge of an atom is zero. • has an equal number of protons and electrons. number of protons = number of electrons Since protons and neutrons account for most of the mass of the atom, count the number of protons and neutrons Aluminum has 13 protons and 13 electrons. The net charge is zero. 13 protons (13+) + 13 electrons (13 -) = 0 to determine the mass number!!! 13 14 Subatomic Particles Example Nuclear Symbol • represents a particular atom of an element. • gives the mass number in the upper left corner and the atomic number in the lower left corner. Example: Example: An atom of sodium with atomic number 11 and a mass number 23 has the following atomic symbol: mass number 23 31 P 65 8 15 30 ? p+ ?n ? e- ? p+ ?n ? e- ? p+ ?n ? e- Na atomic number 16 O 11 15 Zn 16 4 Subatomic Particles Example 16 O 31 P 65 8 15 30 ? p+ ?n ? e- ? p+ ?n ? e- 8 p+ 8n 8 e- Subatomic Particles Example Zn 16 O 31 P 65 8 15 30 15 p+ 16 n 15 e- ? p+ ?n ? e- 8 p+ 8n 8 e- Zn 17 18 Subatomic Particles Example Isotopes z Atoms with the same number of protons, but 16 O 31 P 65 8 15 30 15 p+ 16 n 15 e- 30 p+ 35 n 30 e- 8 p+ 8n 8 e- different numbers of neutrons. Zn z Atoms of the same element (same atomic number) with different mass numbers Isotopes of chlorine 35Cl 37Cl 17 17 chlorine - 35 19 chlorine - 37 20 5 Learning Check Atomic Mass An atom of zinc has a mass number of 65. A. Number of protons in the zinc atom 1) 30 2) 35 Na 22.99 z Listed on the periodic table 3) 65 z Gives the mass of “average” atom of each element B. Number of neutrons in the zinc atom 1) 30 2) 35 3) 65 compared to 12C z Average atom based on all the isotopes and their abundance % C. What is the mass number of a zinc isotope with 37 neutrons? 1) 37 2) 65 3) 67 z Atomic mass (!unlike mass #!) is not a whole # 21 Calculating Atomic Mass 22 Example: Atomic Mass of Mg z Percent(%) abundance of isotopes Isotopes 24Mg = Mass of Isotope 24.0 amu z Mass of each isotope of that element 25Mg = 25.0 amu 10.13% z Weighted average = 26Mg = 26.0 amu 11.17% (mass isotope1 x %) + (mass (mass isotope2 x %) + … 100 Abundance 78.70% Atomic mass (average mass) Mg = 24.3 amu 100 Mg 24.3 23 24 6 Why Do We Care About Isotopes? Answer: Nuclear Stability! Radiation Primer: Subatomic Particles Revisited Radiation comes from nucleus of an atom Unstable nucleus emits a particle or energy “belt of stability” protons and/or neutrons typically lost from nucleus changing identity of element Unstable nuclei α alpha (particle) Radioactive Can decay to release alpha particles, beta particles and positrons. β beta (particle) γ gamma (pure energy) 25 26 Half-Life of a Radioisotope Examples of Half-Life Isotope C-15 RaRa-224 RaRa-223 I-125 C-14 U-235 The time for the radiation level to fall (decay) to oneone-half its initial value decay curve initial 1 half-life 8 mg 4 mg 2 2 mg 3 Half life 2.4 sec 3.6 days 12 days 60 days 5700 years 710 000 000 years 1 mg 27 28 7 Medical Uses of Radiation Diagnostic Methods Radioisotopes behave chemically the same as stable isotopes of the same atom Thus, can use to target an organ or a physiological process Usually γ-emitters because radiation has to emerge from the body if the imaging equipment is to see it Nuclear medicine has two main arenas Diagnostic methods Small amounts of radioisotopes administered to help image an organ or follow a physiological process Therapeutic methods Larger radiation doses to deliver fatal punch to diseased tissue 29 PET Scans Some Radio-Imaging Isotopes P-32 CrCr-51 FeFe-59 SeSe-75 I-131 HgHg-197 30 Positron Emission Tomography Good for following physiological processes Patient given shortshort-lived β+-emitter Eye tumors Spleen shape and GI disorders Bone marrow function Pancreas scan Thyroid malfunction Kidney scan 11 6 - β+ C 11 5 B + 0 1 e+ t1/2 20 min β+ The β hits an electron in tissues 31 32 8 PET Scans A PET scan instrument places patient inside a ring of detectors to see the paired, 180o gamma rays With annihilation event, a pair of gamma rays are emitted in opposite directions 0 1 e+ + 0 -1 e- 2γ Very clear images because signal distinguished from background radiation (only seen in one direction) 33 34 http://www.breastcancer.org/testing_pet.html PET Scans Can incorporate CC-11 into a number of organic compounds to follow Blood flow Glucose metabolism (Fig 9E.5, Page 259) Oxygen uptake Find brain areas associated with epilepsy Find hard to spot tumors Abnormal lymph nodes imaged by PET scan 35 Also: http://www.ldcmri.com/html/pet_scans.html 36 9 Therapeutic Radiation Therapeutic Radiation Selective destruction of pathological cells and tissues Rapidly dividing cells most vulnerable thus it targets cancer Used when cancer is not well localized CoCo-60 is common source of xx-rays and γ-rays 37 Can also deliver a radiation dose with an internal administration of selected isotopes I-131 targets thyroid cancer - thyroxine contains iodine I-125 crystals implanted in prostate gland to deliver continuous radiation (t1/2 = 60 days) Y-90 implanted in pituitary to slow tumor growth everywhere 38 Radio-Tracer Compounds Huge use of radioisotopes to study chemical reactions Can see 10-19g/L - almost individual atoms Photosynthesis - carbon in glucose comes from CO2 Calcium - uptake is 90% efficient in children; 40% efficient in adults Zinc - uptake by trees in winter 2 ft/day 39 10