Title: P4 Overview radiation for life
1P4 Overviewradiation for life
- GCSE Additional Science Y 11
2Uses of Electrostatics
- Defibrillators restarts a heart
- Paint Spraying
- Dust Precipitators
- Photocopiers Laser Printers
4 uses
3Paint Spraying
- Spray Gun is charged all of the paint gets the
same charge - Like charges repel paint particles spread out
giving a fine spray - Object being painted is given the opposite charge
paint is attracted to object and sticks to it. - Advantages less wasted paint even coat of
paint awkward places are painted.
4Electrostatic Dust Precipitators
- Removes harmful smoke particles from a chimney.
- Metal grid/wires placed in chimney
- Grid connected to high voltage supply
- Dust particles attracted to metal grid
- Dust particles stick together
- Large particles fall down chimney
- Soot used to make building blocks
5Current Electricity
- Electric Circuits must be COMPLETE to allow
electricity to flow from to terminals on a
cell/battery. - A Cell provides POTENTIAL DIFFERENCE (Voltage) in
VOLTS. This provides the FORCE to move the charge
carriers (in wires electrons in electrolysis
ions) - The resulting flow of charge is called CURRENT
measured in AMPS. - Current always flows from to (even though the
electrons flow from to !)
6A Circuit to measure resistance
Resistance Potential difference Current
R V I
7Ohms Law
Cover up what you want to find
- For a metallic conductor at constant
temperature, the ration of Potential difference
(V) to Current (I) is constant. - The constant is called Resistance, R measured in
ohms, symbol O. - So R V I, also V I x R and I V R
8Mains Electricity
Fuses come in various values 2A,3A,5A,13A. A
13Amp fuse blows when current through it exceeds
13Amps
- Live (brown) brings supply to house
- Neutral (blue) is return path to power station
- Earth (green and yellow)
- carries current to 0V if the casing becomes
live. This blows the FUSE which cuts off the
supply. - Fuse is in series with the Live wire.
A circuit-breaker is a re-settable fuse which can
be re-set at the flick of a switch These have
replaced fuse wire in the main fuse box.
9Ultrasound - sound waves beyond the human hearing
range
- Range of human hearing is 20 20,000Hz so beyond
that is Ultrasound
Sound waves are LONGITUDINAL the vibrations of
the particles are in the same direction as the
wave
Compression particles in wave squashed
together Rarefaction particles in wave spread
out. Wavelength distance occupied by one
complete wave (unit metres) Frequency number
of complete waves per second (unit
hertz) Amplitude maximum distance a particle
moves from its normal position.
10Uses of Ultrasound
- Check the condition of a foetus
- Investigate heart and liver problems
- Look for tumours in the body
- Break down kidney stones and stones elsewhere in
the body - Measure the speed of blood flow in vessels when a
blockage of a vein or artery is suspected - Cataract surgery
Non medical uses dentists shake plaque and
dirt off teeth
jewellers clean delicate pieces of
jewellery and watches
11Radiotherapy and Diagnosis
- Gamma rays ?
- High frequency/energy electromagnetic waves
emitted from the nucleus of a radioactive isotope - Very penetrating can pass into the body to
treat internal organs - Can damage living cells over exposure should be
avoided
- X rays
- High frequency/energy electromagnetic waves
emitted when high speed electrons are decelerated - Very penetrating
- Can damage living cells
- An X-ray machine can produce and control X-rays
of different energies so some X-rays can have
higher energy than ? rays
12Alpha, Beta and Gamma emissions
Ionisation the ability to remove an electron
from an atom, causing the atom to become
charged. Alpha has 2 charges so has a great
ionising effect, beta has 1 charge so a lesser
ionising effect.
Alpha and Beta particles are not good inside the
body they cannot escape from inside so dont
swallow any remember Mr Litvinienko? killed
with Polonium 210, an alpha emitter!
13Using Gamma radiation
- Treating cancer large doses can kill and
destroy cancer cells. A gamma knife is rotated
around a cancer to give the cancer a high dose
but the healthy tissue a low dose. Side effects
of this kind of therapy can be unpleasant but
slows down the growth of the cancer. - Sterilising hospital equipment Gamma kills
bacteria and prevents the spread of disease.
Radiographers carry out procedures using X-rays
and nuclear radiation. Lead prevents tissue
absorbing radiation.
Tracers some radioactive isotopes (in very low
doses!) can be injected into the body to
highlight places where a cancer may be
growing. Common isotopes are Technetium 99
and Iodine - 123
14Radioactivity - discovered by Becquerel and
researched by Pierre Marie Curie (among others)
- Some atoms naturally break up because the nuclear
forces holding them together are not strong
enough. - Radioactive substances decay naturally and give
out Alpha (a), Beta (ß) and Gamma (?) radiation. - Radioactivity is a random process that cannot be
controlled by external conditions such as
temperature, pressure etc. Neither can the decay
be predicted. - Radioactivity is detected usually with a
Geiger-Müller (GM) tube and a ratemeter. - Activity is measured by counting the average
number of nuclei that decay every second, unit
Becquerels (Bq).
15Half Life
- The time taken for the activity of a sample to
fall to one half of its original activity, - OR
- The time for half of the atoms in a radioactive
isotope to have decayed. - It is different for every radioisotope
A Typical Decay curve
16Alpha Decay
Remember A is the mass number protons
neutrons Z is the
proton number number of protons OR electrons
- An alpha particle (or helium nucleus) contains 4
nucleons (2p 2n) - When a is emitted, A decreases by 4, Z
decreases by 2 - The new element formed is two places lower in the
Periodic table than the original radioisotope. - 92U 2a 90Th
238
4
234
17Beta Decay -1ß
0
- A beta particle is a high energy electron
- emitted from the nucleus (!)
- This is because a neutron decays to a proton,
an electron and a bit of antimatter - When ß- is emitted, A does not change
- Z increases by 1
- (because it has an extra proton).
- 6C -1ß 7N
- A new element is formed that is one place higher
in the periodic table than the original
radioisotope.
14
0
14
18Background Radiation
- This is ionising radiation that is always present
in the environment. - The level of background radiation is low and does
not cause harm. - E.g. Granite contains small amounts of Uranium
which decays to Radon, a radioactive gas. - Sources (7) radioactivity in the air radiation
from Space (cosmic rays) rocks food medical
uses nuclear power nuclear weapons testing
(these last two make up just 1).
19Uses of Radioactivity
- Alpha is used in Smoke detectors Americium-241
- Beta is used to monitor the thickness of paper
Strontium-90 - Gamma is used to treat cancer to search for
leaks from pipes to check welds in castings.
- Dating
- Uranium/Lead levels are used to date rocks VERY
OLD! - Potassium/Argon levels date rocks up to about
100,000 years old - Carbon 14/Carbon12 levels are used to check
organic material up to 60,000 years old
20Nuclear Fission
- U235 can become unstable when bombarded with
neutrons. - It accepts a neutron, becomes U236, which decays
readily to Kr92, Ba141 and extra neutrons. (These
may go on to strike the nuclei of other atoms
causing further fission reactions - a CHAIN REACTION).
- It also releases massive amounts of energy!!!
21A Nuclear Power Station
Control Rods in a reactor core
The output of a Nuclear Reactor is controlled
by A graphite moderator between the fuel rods
slows down fast-moving neutrons Boron control
rods absorb neutrons and so control the rate of
fission.