Title: Radioactive Decay
1Radioactive Decay
2Radioactive materials decay from the Parent
material into the Daughter Product.
Daughter Product
Original Parent Material
3- Some atoms in the parent are isotopes
- These atoms have a different number of neutrons
than protons - They are unstable
- As isotopes decay to stable daughter energy is
released
4Youll never know which atoms will decay...
(16 atoms)
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6 or when ...
7But one thing we do know...
8...is that it always takes the same amount of
time for half to disappear.
(8 atoms)
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19Radioactive Decay
- Parent unstable
- Daughter stable
- Half-life is the time required for HALF of the
atoms of the unstable parent to decay to stable
daughter
20Radioactive Decay Data
21Each half-life, the amount of atoms gets cut in
half.
22Since you dont know how many atoms you started
with, a ratio between parent to daughter will
tell you how many half-lives have gone by.
100 parent 0 daughter 0 half lives
23One half-life.
50 parent 50 daughter 1 half-life
24Two half-lives.
25 parent 75 daughter 2 half-lives
25Three half-lives.
12.5 parent 87.5 daughter 3 half-lives
26Four half-lives.
6.25 parent 93.75 daughter 4 half-lives
27Dont worry about the last atom. You start with
so many trillions that you never really get
there. (It will just decay and then theyre
all gone.)
28Shape of curve similar for each radioactive
isotope
29Half Life
- Continues indefinitely
- Random and spontaneous
- Not affected by temperature or pressure
- Not affected by mass or volume of parent