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Chapter 19 Nuclear Chemistry I. Properties of the Nucleus A. Chemist’s View: 1) Seat of positive charge and mass in atoms and molecules 2) Not very important to chemical reactivity; valence electrons are key B. Nuclear Characteristics 1) Very small size: about 1 x 10-13 cm (Whole atom = 1 x 10-8 cm) 2) Very high density: 1.6 x 1014 g/cm3 3) Very high energy processes (106 time greater than typical chemical reactions) 4) Components = “Nucleons” a) Protons = +1 charge, 1 mass unit (Atomic Number = Z = # of protons) b) Neutrons = 0 charge, 1 mass unit c) Mass Number = A = sum of neutrons + protons d) Isotopes = same atomic number but different mass numbers (#’s of neutrons) e) Nuclide = a particular isotope A Z X 126 C, 136C, 14 6 C II. Nuclear Stability and Radioactive Decay A. B. Thermodynamic Stability = potential energy of the nucleus compared to separate parts Kinetic Stability = Probability that the nucleus will undergo Radioactive Decay 14 0 1) Example: 14 6 2) 3) Both A and Z must be conserved (must be the same on both sides of equation) Zone of Stability a) All nuclides with Z > 84 unstable b) (A-Z):Z ratio = 1 stable if light 12 6 c) C (A-Z):Z ratio > 1 stable if heavy 202 80 d) Calcium-40 is“Doubly Magic” C 7 N -1 e Hg Magic Numbers: i. Z = even, (A-Z) = even stable ii. Z = odd, (A-Z) = odd unstable iii. Proton or Neutron numbers of 2, 8, 20, 28, 50, 82, 126 very stable C. Types of Radioactive Decay 1) Decay involving the change in mass number of the nucleus a) a-particle production: loss of a helium nucleus; very common 238 92 U Th 230 90 b) 226 88 Ra 42 He Spontaneous Fission: splitting of a heavy nuclide into about equal parts; rare 254 98 2) Th 42 He 234 90 Cf lighter nuclides neutrons Decay when mass number stays the same a) b-particle production: loss of an electron i. Fairly common for nuclides where Neutrons:Protons > 1.0 ii. Nucleus doesn’t contain electrons; loss of energy that becomes electron iii. Net effect: changes a neutron to a proton (Z increases by +1) Th 234 90 131 53 I Pa 234 91 Xe 131 54 0 -1 0 -1 e e b) g-ray production: loss of a high energy photon i. Can accompany other decay types ii. Way for nucleus in an excited state to return to ground state 238 92 c) U Th 42 He 2 00g 234 90 Positron production: loss of mass of an electron, but positive charge i. Occurs for nuclides with Neutron:Proton ratio < 1.0 ii. Net effect is change of a proton to a neutron (Z changes by -1) 22 11 Na 22 10 Ne 01e iii. Positron is the Antiparticle of an Electron; collision with an electron leads to annihilation 0 1 d) e 0 -1 e 2 00g Electron capture: an inner orbital electron is captured by the nucleus i. Always produces g-rays as well ii. The ideal reaction for an alchemist, but too slow to be useful 201 80 Hg 0 -1 e Au 00g 201 79 Examples 214 III. The Kinetics of Radioactive Decay A. Rate of Decay = - change in number of nuclides per unit time 1) Radioactive nuclides decay at a rate proportional to the size of the sample N Rate N kN t 2) 3) This is the same as a first order rate law Integrated first order rate law and half life equation work too! N kt ln N0 4) 0.693 k Example: Technicium-99 is used for medical imaging. k = 0.116/h. t1/2 =? t1/2 5) t1/2 0.693 0.693 5.97 h k 0.116/h Example: t1/2 of Molybdenum-99 is 67.0 h. How much of a 1.000 mg sample is left after 335 h? t1/2 0.693 0.693 0.693 k 0.0103/h k t1/2 67.0h N N kt ln e kt N (N 0 )e kt (1.000mg)e ( 0.0103/ h )(335h ) 0.032mg N0 N0 B. Carbon Dating 1) Archeological technique to determine the age of artifacts 2) Willard Libby received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for this work 3) Based on the radioactive decay of carbon-14 14 6 4) 14 7 N 0 -1 e Carbon-14 is continuously produced in the atmosphere by neutrons from space 14 7 5) C N 01n 14 6 C 11H a) These processes have reached equilibrium: no net change in [carbon-14] b) Plants take up the carbon as CO2 while alive, but stop when they die c) Ratio of 14C to 12C begins to get smaller as soon as the plant dies d) t1/2 = 5730 years for the decay of 14C Example: 14C decay is 3.1/min. Fresh wood is 13.6/min. t1/2 = 5730 y. t1/2 0.693 0.693 0.693 k 1.21 x 10 4 /y k t1/2 5730y N 3.1 ln ln N N 13.6 12,000 y kt t 0 ln 4 N k 1.21 x 10 /y 0 IV. Applications of Nuclear Reactions A. Nuclear Transformations 1) Particle accelerators: device to propel particles at high speed a) Linear accelerator uses changing electric fields b) Cyclotron uses oscillating voltage to accelerate; magnets cause circular path 2) Bombarding Nuclides with other nuclides or particles can lead to new Nuclides 3) Most of the “trans-Uranium” elements were synthesized this way (Z = 93-112) a) Neutron Bombardment 238 92 b) 239 93 Np 0 -1 e Positive-Ion Bombardment 239 94 B. U 01n U 42 He 242 96 Cm 01n Medical Uses 1) Radiotracers = radioactive nuclides introduced to an organism to follow pathway a) Iodine-131 is used to diagnose thyroid gland problems b) Thallium-201 and Technetium-99 diagnose heart damage 2) PET scan = Positron Emission Tomography Targeted Imaging: PET DRUG radiopharm C. Energy Production 1) Fission = splitting a heavy nuclide into 2 lighter, more stable ones (H = -) a) Uranium fission provides electrical power 235 92 U 01n Ba 141 56 92 36 Kr 3 01n b) c) 3.5 x 10-11 J/nuclide = 2.1 x 1013 J/mol of energy is given off by loss of mass E = mc2 is used to calculate the amount of energy from the mass loss d) Chain reaction: neutrons produced can cause more reactions i) Subcritical: < 1 neutron/reaction causes another fission (rxn dies out) ii) Critical: = 1 neutron/reaction causes another fission (rxn sustained) iii) Supercritical: > 1 neutron/reaction causes another fission (explosion) e) Nuclear Reactor: Fission heats water, runs turbine, make electricity i) Reactor core: enriched uranium (3% U-235) sustains the reaction ii) Control rods absorb neutrons to regulate the reaction f) Breeder Reactor: produces its own fissionable Pu-239 from U-238 Pu-239 is toxic and flames in air, so U.S. doesn’t use, France does 2) Fusion = combining 2 light nuclides to form a heavier, more stable one (H = -) a) Stars produce their heat through this process 1 1 H 11H 21H 01e 3 2 He 23 He 42 He 2 11H 1 1 H 21H 23 He 3 2 He 11H 42 He 01e b) D. Would be great energy source on Earth i. Lots of small nuclei to use as fuel ii. But, only takes place at high temperatures (40,000,000 Kelvins) iii. High temperature overcomes strong nuclear repulsion (+/+) iv. E = mc2 (4.03298 amu in; 4.00260 amu out) Effects of Radiation 1) Damage to organisms a) Somatic damage = damage to the organisms itself (sickness or death) b) Genetic damage = damage to genetic material (offspring are effected) 2) Factors controlling radiation effects a) Energy of the radiation: higher energy = more damage (1 Rad = 0.01 J/kg) b) Penetrating ability: g-ray > b-particle (1cm) > a-particle (stopped by skin) c) Ionizing ability: removing electrons; a-particle >> g-ray d) Chemical properties: Kr-85 inert, excrete quickly; Sr-90 replaces Ca, stays 3) REM 4) REM = Roentgen Equivalent for Man = normalizes radiation effects for different types of radiation exposure a. Short term effects of radiation exposure b. There are natural and man-made sources of radiation exposure Models for radiation exposure damage a. Linear model: any exposure is bad, minimize all exposures b. Threshold model: no damage unless a certain amount of exposure occurs c. Better safe than sorry: we don’t know which model is correct, follow linear