Title: Great Ideas in Science: Lecture 7
1Great Ideas in ScienceLecture 7 Nuclear
Reactions
- Professor Robert Hazen
- UNIV 301 October 11, 2006
Great Idea Nuclear energy depends on the
conversion of mass into energy
2Nuclear Reactions
- Key Idea Nuclear reactions result from the
rearrangement of an atoms protons and neutrons
(i.e. the nucleus) - Key Words
- Proton
- Neutron
- Nucleus
- Isotope
- Radioactivity
- Nuclear Fission
- Nuclear Fusion
3The Building Blocks of Matter
- Of what is matter made?
- Atoms
- Nuclei and electrons
- Quarks
4Key Words About Atoms
- Atom Any object with a nucleus and electrons
- Element An atom with a known number of protons
(the atomic number) - Ion An electronically-charged atom with a
different number of protons () and electrons (-) - Isotope An element with a known number of
neutrons
5The Structure of the Atom
- Electrons in shells (energy levels)
- Negatively charged
- Shift during chemical reactions
- Central dense nucleus
- Composed of protons and neutrons
- Positively charged
- Nucleus - Stays put during chemical reactions
6Isotopes Hydrogen Carbon
- H-1 1 proton
- H-2 1 p 1 neutron (Deuterium)
- H-3 1 p 2 n (Tritium)
- C-12 6p 6n
- C-13 6p 7n
- C-14 6p 8n (radioactive isotope)
- For any given element the number of protons is
fixed
7Chart of the Isotopes (p vs. N)
8Four Fates of Isotopes
- An isotope may be stable
- An isotope may be radioactive
- An isotope may be split apart by fission
- An isotope may combine with another by fusion
9Stable Isotopes
- 99.999 of all the atoms around us
- Examples are carbon-12 and carbon-13
- Different isotopes dont affect chemical
reactions. - Used in scientific research to track chemical
reactions (2 ways) - As tracers
- Fractionation
10Radioactivity or Radioactive Decay (three kinds)
The spontaneous emission of an energetic particle
by a nucleus
- Alpha radiation
- Beta radiation
- Gamma radiation
11Most Isotopes are Radioactive
STABLE RADIOACTIVE
12Alpha Radiation
- Atom spontaneously loses 2 protons and 2 neutrons
( a Helium-4 nucleus) - Uranium-238 ? Thorium-234 2n 2p
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13Beta Radiation
- One neutron spontaneously becomes a proton plus
an electron - Thorium-234 ? Proactinium-234
14Gamma Radiation
- Atom spontaneously emits a gamma ray
(electromagnetic radiation) - Uranium-238 ? Uranium-238 ?
15SUMMARY The Three Kinds of Radioactive Decay
- Alpha Decay
- Release of a particle with 2 protons and 2
neutrons - Beta Decay
- Neutron becomes a proton
- Emission of electron (ß-ray)
- Gamma Radiation
- Electromagnetic radiation
16Radioactivity and Health
- Ionization
- Stripping off electrons
- Long-term effects
- Cancer
- Birth defects
17Half-Life
- The average time for decay of ½ batch of
radioactive isotopes - Wide range of half-lives
18Radiometric Dating
- Radiometric dating
- Know half-life of isotope
- Know how much was there
- Measure whats left
- Carbon-14
- Half-life 5700 years
19Radiometric Dating
- Geology
- Need longer half-lives
- Uranium, potassium
20Radioactive Decay Chain (radon)
21Nuclear Fission (Splitting)
- Fission Splitting of nucleus
- A nuclear reactor converts mass to energy
22Nuclear Fission (Splitting)
23Nuclear Fission The Atom Bomb
24Yucca Mountain, Nevada (NIMBY)
25Nuclear Fusion (Fusing)
- Hydrogen atoms combine to form helium
- Some mass is converted into energy
26Nuclear Fusion Hydrogen Bomb
27Stars are Giant Fusion Reactors
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28Fates of Stars
29Benefits of Isotopes
- Stable Isotopes
- Medical Research
- Environmental Tracers
- Radioactive Isotopes
- Medical diagnosis
- Cancer treatments
- Environmental tracers
- Age Determination
- Nuclear fission
- Power generation
- Nuclear Fusion
- The Sun