Title: The Nucleolus: A Chemist
1Chapter 18
- The Nucleolus A Chemists View
2Topics
- Nuclear stability and radioactive decay
- The kinetics of radioactivity
- Nuclear transformations
- Detection and use of radioactivity
- Thermodynamic stability of the nucleus
- Nuclear fission and nuclear fusion
- Effects of radiation
3IntroductionNuclear Reactions vs Chemical
Reactions
- Chemical reactions Changes in the outer
electronic structure of atoms or molecules - Nuclear reactions study of changes in structure
of nuclei and subsequent changes in chemistry. - Radioactive nuclei spontaneously change
structure and emit radiation. - Differences between nuclear and chemical
reactions - Much larger release in energy in nuclear
reaction. - Isotopes show identical chemical reactions but
different nuclear reactions. - Nuclear reactions not sensitive to chemical
environment. - Nuclear reaction produces different elements.
- Rate of nuclear reaction not dependent upon
temperature.
4Representation of atomic nuclei
Mass number- A
Atomic number- Z
Isotopes
5Nucleus components
- Nucleon any nuclear particle, e.g. protons, p,
and neutrons, n.
Nuclide
Isotopes atoms that have identical atomic
numbers but different mass numbers Nuclide is a
term used to identify an individual atom. Each
individual atom is called nuclide
6Radioactivity
- Radioactivity is a nuclear reaction in which an
unstable nucleus decomposes spontaneously - Natural radioactivity
- Natural unstable nuclei decompose
more stable nuclei - Artificial radioactivity
- Synthetic unstable nuclei decompose
more stable nuclei
Decay
Parent nuclei
Daughter nuclei
7Radioactive Decay Series
8Decay of P-32 to S-32
918.1 Nuclear stability and radioactive decay
- Nuclear stability
- Thermodynamic stability the potential energy of
a nucleus as compared with sum of the potential
energies of its components protons and neutrons - Kinetic stability it describes the probability
that a nucleus will undergo decomposition to form
a different nucleus- a process called radioactive
decay - Stability depends upon a balance between
repulsive forces (between protons) and strong
attraction forces between nuclei
10Nuclear Stability
- The stability of a nucleus depends mainly on A,
the mass number and Z, the atomic number. Up to
the mass number 30 or 40, a nucleus has
approximately the same number of neutrons and
protons to be stable. - Bigger nuclei must have more neutrons than
protons. As Z gets bigger, repulsive forces get
bigger. - When nucleus gets big enough, no neutron is
enough to keep it stable. After, Z 82, no nuclei
is stable. Such unstable nuclei are radioactive,
which means they undergo radiations in order to
become stable.
11Nuclear Stability
- A nucleus having very much protons compared to
neutrons will never be stable - This does not mean that a nucleus with many
neutrons and little protons will be stable. - To understand this we may look at this graph,
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14Empirical rules for predicting stability of nuclei
- Neutron-to-proton ratio varies with atomic number
- Light isotopes (small atomic number) have a
Neutron-to-proton ratio almost 1(almost stable) - Nuclei are held together by strong attractive
forces but electrostatic repulsion causes large
atoms (gt83 protons) to be unstable.
15- Nuclides with even number of nucleons
- (p n) are more stable than those with odd
number - Certain number of protons or neutrons appear to
be particularly stable. The magic numbers are - 2, 8, 20, 28,50, 82, 126
- These numbers are in parallel to those produce
chemical stability - 2, 10, 18, 36, 54 and 86
- (Noble gas configuration)
16Types of radiation emitted in natural
radioactivity
17Types of radioactive decay
-
- radiation attracted towards
- negatively charged plate
- Þ Positively charged ?
- radiation attracted towards positively
- charged plate
- Þ Negatively charged 1e- ?
- radiation not attracted to either
plate Þ - Neutral. When emitted it does not change
atomic or mass numbers - Very high energy
photons very short wavelength - . Positron is a positive electron
- Positron emission is equivalent to
a fall of e-1 in - nucleus
18NUCLEAR REACTIONS
- Radioactivity nucleus unstable and spontaneously
disintegrates. - Nuclear Bombardment causes nuclei to
disintegrate due to bombardment with very
energetic particles. - Particles in nuclear reactions
19Balancing nuclear equations
Protactinium
- Total Nucleon Number (TOP VALUES) Total number
of protons and neutrons - Total electric charge (BOTTOM VALUES)
- Are kept the same.
20- Nuclear reaction is written maintaining mass and
charge balance. - E.g.
21Examples of adioactive decay
- Beta emission Converts neutron into a proton by
emission of energetic electron atomic
increases - E.g. Determine product for following reaction
- Alpha emission emits He particle.
- E.g. Determine product
22Positron emission Converts proton to neutron
E.g. Determine product of
Gamma emission no change in mass or charge but
usually part of some other decay process. E.g.
Electron capture electron from electron orbitals
captured to
convert proton to neutron.
E.g. Determine product
23More examples of radioactive decay
Alpha production (?) helium nucleus, Beta
production (?)
24Examples of radioactive decay
Gamma ray production (?) Positron
production Electron capture (inner-orbital
electron is captured by the nucleus)
2518.2 The kinetics of radioactive decay
- Nuclear decay is a first order reaction
- Rate ? amount of radioactive isotope present
- For a radioactive nuclides, the rate of decay,
that is the negative change in the number of
nuclides per unit time - is directly proportional to the number of
nuclides N
That is
This is a first order process
of nuclides remaining at time t
Original of nuclides
26Half-Life
- The time required for the number of nuclides to
reach half the original value (N0/2).
27Examples of Half-Life
- Isotope Half life
- C-15 2.4 sec
- Ra-224 3.6 days
- Ra-223 12 days
- I-125 60 days
- C-14 5700 years
- U-235 710 000 000 years
28Examples
- 1. The half-life of Cobalt-60 is 5.26 years how
much of - the original amount would be left after
21.04 - years?
- 2. Tritium decays by beta emission with a
half-life of - 12.3 years. How much of the original
amount - would be left after 30 years?
- 3. If a 1.0 g sample of tritium is stored for
5.0 years, - what mass of that isotope remains?
- k 0.563/year.
2918.3 Nuclear Transformation
- The change of one element into another
- Bombard nuclei with nuclear particles to convert
element to another one to become more stable
through radioactivity is transmutation.
Rutherford
Irene Curie
30- Nuclear transformation can occur by alpha or
beta radiation, or - some other nuclear reactions such as nuclear
bombardment - Nuclear transformation is achieved mostly using
particle accelerator - Accelerators are needed when positive ions are
used as the - bombarding particles
- The particle is accelerated to a very high
velocity thus it can - overcome the repulsion and can penetrate the
target nucleus - Neutrons are also used often as bombarding
particles - Neutrons are uncharged, thus they are not
repelled and readily - absorbed by many nuclides
- Using neutron and positive ion bombardment made
possible to - extend the periodic table
-
-
- Since 1940, elements with atomic numbers 93
through - 112 have been synthesized
- These elements are called transuranium elements
31Schematic diagram of a cyclotron
Positive ion
Nucleus
32A Schematic Diagram of a Linear Accelerator
334. Detection and uses of radiation
- Geiger counters
- detect charged particles produced from
interaction of gas with particles emitted from
radioactive material. The device detects the
current flow - Scintillation counters
- detect particles from radioactive material by
measuring intensity of light when these particles
hit substances such as ZnS. - Units 1 curie (Ci) 3.7x1010 disintigrationss-1
34A representation of a Geiger-Müller counter.
High energy particles produced from radioactive
decay produce ions when they travel through matter
Ar(g) Ar(g) e-
35Scintillation counters
36Dating by radioactivity
Carbon-14 Dating
Carbon-14 is formed naturally at a fairly
constant rate by bombardment of atmospheric
nitrogen by cosmic rays (high energy neutrons).
147N 10n ? 146C 11 H
and then over time C-14 decays 146C ? 147N
0-1e
37Age of organic material
- As long the plant or animal lives the
- C-14/C-12 ratio in its molecules remains the
same as in the atmosphere (1/1012) because of the
continuous uptake of carbon. - When the plant/animal dies, C-14 decays and the
ratio decreases - t1/2 for C-14 5730 yr
- If C-14/C-12 found in the old wood is ½ of that
in a currently living plant, then its age is 5730
yr. - This assumes that the current C-14/C-12 ratio is
the same as that in the ancient plant
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39Age of rocks/Age of earth
- U-238 present in certain rocks slowly decays to
- Pb-206
- Pb-206 was not present originally
- As time progresses the amount of U-238 decreases
and Pb-206 increases - By measuring the ratio of Pb-206 / U-238
scientists can determine the age of a rock - The oldest rocks can then be used to determine
the minimum age of the earth - It is assumed that
- Pb-206 was not present originally
- All of the decay products are retained
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42Medical applications of radioactivity
- Radioactive nuclides can be introduced into
organisms in food or drugs where their paths can
be traced by monitoring their radioactivity - Radioactive tracers provide sensitive methods
for - learning about biological systems,
- detection of disease,
- monitoring the action and effectiveness of drugs,
- early detection of pregnancy,
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46 Medical applications of radioactivity
4718-5 Thermodynamic Stability of the Nucleus
We can determine the thermodynamic stability of a nucleus by calculating the change in potential energy that would occur if that nucleus were formed from its constituent protons and neutrons. For example, the hypothetical process of forming nucleus from eight neutrons and eight protons
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51- What is the change in energy that correspond to
the formation of 1 mol of O-16 from its protons
and neutrons? - Thus,
- (-1.366X10-4 kg/mol)(3.00X108 m/s2)
-1.23X1013J/mol - Consequently
- Nuclear processes are accompanied with extremely
large energy compared to chemical and physical
changes - Nuclear processes constitute a potentially
valuable energy resource
52- Thermodynamic stability of a particular nucleus
is represented as energy released per nucleon - Calculate the energy released per a nucleon of
O-16
Thus, 7.98 MeV of energy per nucleon would be
released if O-16 were from neutrons and protons
53- Thus, 7.98 MeV of energy per nucleon would be
- released if O-16 were from neutrons and
protons - The energy required to decompose the above
nucleus into its components has the same quantity
but with ve sign This is the binding energy
per nucleon for O-16
54Calculation of binding energy
- Calculate the binding energy per nucleon
- for nucleus.
- (Atomic masses 4.0026 amu,
- 1.0078 amu)
- We must calculate the mass defect for
- He-4
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58Nuclear binding energy
- It is the energy required to decompose nucleus
into protons and neutrons or it is the energy
released when protons and neutrons combine
together to form nucleus - The NBE is a measure of the stability of the
nucleus towards decomposition. Large NBE means
more stability. Atoms of intermediate masses have
larger NBE than either the very light atoms or
the very heavy ones
5918.6 Nuclear fission and nuclear reaction
- The graph above has very important implications
for the use of nuclear processes as sources of
energy. - Energy is released, that is, ??E is negative,
when a process goes from a less stable to a more
stable state nuclei - The higher a nuclide is on the curve, the more
stable it is. - This means that two types of nuclear processes
will be exothermic - 1. Combining two light nuclei to form a
heavier, more - stable nucleus. This process is called
fusion. - 2. Splitting a heavy nucleus into two nuclei
with smaller - mass numbers. This process is called
fission. - Because of the large binding energies involved in
holding the nucleus together, both these
processes involve energy changes more than a
million times larger than those associated with
chemical reactions.
60The Binding Energy Per Nucleon as a Function of
Mass Number
Fusion of light nuclei and fission of heavy
nuclei are exothermic processes
Highest stability
Nuclear fission
61- Nuclei of heavy atoms will gain more stability if
they are fragmented (fission into intermediate
ones). They will give off energy when the fission
occurs - Nuclei of light atoms will gain more stability if
they are fused together (fusion) to give atoms of
intermediate NBE. Energy will be given off when
fusion occurs.
62Both Fission and Fusion Produce More Stable
Nuclides
63Nuclear Fission
- Several isotopes of the heavy elements undergo
fission if bombarded with neutrons of high enough
energy - In practice attention was paid to
- and
The discussion will focus on That is only 0.7
of the naturally occurring U
is most abundant isotope and does not go fission
64 Fission
- 23592U 10n ? 23692U
- and 10-14 seconds later...
- 23692U ? 9236Kr 14156Ba 3 10n ENERGY
- 50 possible sets of fission products (sum of
atomic numbers 92) - 3 neutrons released for ONE 23592U (too many for
stability, thus fragmentation continues to reach
stability)
65Fission Process
66Chain Fission Reactions
- Produced neutrons will attack more and more
forming chain reaction - This chain reaction occurs in the atomic bomb.
Energy is evolved in successive fissions that
will lead to tremendous explosion - For the chain reaction to occur must be
large (critical mass), thus most neutrons are
captured - Critical mass for is 1 to 10 Kg
- If the sample is too small most neutrons escape
braking the chain
67Fission Produces a Chain Reaction
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75Nuclear Fission
A self-sustaining fission process is called a
chain reaction.
76Fission Produces Two Neutrons
77Nuclear reactors
- Because of the tremendous energies involved, it
is desirable to develop the fission process as an
energy source to produce electricity. - To accomplish this, reactors were designed in
which controlled fission can occur. - The resulting energy is used to heat water to
produce steam to run turbine generators, in much
the same way that a coal-burning power plant
generates energy. - A schematic diagram of a nuclear power plant is
shown
78- In the reactor core, uranium that has been
enriched to approximately 3 U-235(natural
uranium contains only 0.7 U-235) is housed in
cylinders. - A moderator surrounds the cylinders to slow down
the neutrons so that the uranium fuel can capture
them more efficiently. - Control rods, composed of substances that absorb
neutrons, are used to regulate the power level of
the reactor. The reactor is designed so that
should a malfunction occur, the control are
automatically inserted into the core to stop the
reaction - A liquid that is usually water is circulated
through the core to extract the heat generated - The energy can then passed on via a heat
exchanger to water in the turbine system
79A Schematic Diagram of a Nuclear Power Plant
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81A Schematic Diagram of a Reactor Core
82Breeder Reactors
- Fissionable fuel is produced while the reactor
runs - is changed (split) to fissionable
This reaction involves absorption of neutrons
- As the reactor runs and U-235 is split some of
the excess - neutrons are absorbed by U-238 to produce
Pu-239 - Pu-239 is then separated and used to fuel
another reactor - This reactor, thus breeds nuclear fuel as it
operates
83Breeder Reactors
- Fissionable fuel is produced while the reactor
runs ( is split, giving neutrons for the
creation of )
84Fusion
- Large quantities of energy are produced by the
fusion of two light nuclei to give a heavier one - Stars and sun produce their energy through
nuclear fusion. - Our sun, which presently consists of 73
hydrogen, 26 helium, and 1 other elements,
gives off vast quantities of energy from the
fusion of protons to form helium
85Proposed mechanism for reactions on the sun
T ? 1X109 oC E ? 1X1019 kJ/day
86How does fusion take place?
- The major stumbling block in having these fusion
reactions feasible is that high energies are
required to initiate fusion. - The forces that bind nucleons together to form a
nucleus are effective only at very small
distances (?10-13 cm). - Thus, for two protons to bind together and
thereby release energy, they must get very close
together. - But protons, because they are identically
charged, repel each other electrostatically. - This means that to get two protons (or two
deuterons) close enough to bind together (the
nuclear binding force is not electrostatic), they
must be "shot" at each other at speeds high
enough (106 m/s) to overcome the electrostatic
repulsion. - High temperatures are expected from various
sources that are under study
87Effects of RadiationFactors that make the
biological effects
- The energy of the radiation.
- The higher the energy the more damage it can
cause. Radiation doses are measured in rads
(radiation absorbed dose), where 1rad corresponds
to 10-2 J of energy deposited per kilogram of
tissue. - 2. The penetrating ability of the radiation.
- The particles and rays produced in radioactive
processes vary in their abilities to penetrate
human tissue ? rays are highly penetrating, ??
particles can penetrate approximately 1 cm, and ?
particles are stopped by the skin.
88- 3. The ionizing ability of the radiation
- Extraction of electrons from biomolecules to form
ions is particularly detrimental to their
functions. The ionizing ability of radiation
varies dramatically. For example, ? rays
penetrate very deeply but cause only occasional
ionization. On the other hand, ? particles,
although not very penetrating, are very effective
at causing ionization and produce a dense trail
of damage. - Thus ingestion of an ? particle producer, such as
plutonium, is particularly damaging. - 4. The chemical properties of the radiation
source - When a radioactive nuclide is ingested into the
body, its effectiveness in causing damage depends
on its residence time. For example, Kr-85 and
Sr-90 are both ?-particle producers. - However, since krypton is chemically inert, it
passes through the body quickly and does not have
much time to do damage. - Strontium, being chemically similar to calcium,
can collect in bones, where it may cause leukemia
and bone cancer. - The energy dose of the radiation and its
effectiveness in causing biological damage form
the source for the term rem (roentgen equivalent
for man) - Number of rems (number of rads X RBE (relative
effectiveness of radiation in causing biological
damage)
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93The two models for radiation damage
- In the linear model, even a small dosage
- causes a proportional risk.
- In the threshold, risk begins only after a
- certain dosage