Title: Energy
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RADIATION
- Energy
- in the form of particles
- or electromagnetic waves
- emitted from the nuclei of unstable atoms
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RADIATION
- The term really includes all forms of
electromagnetic radiation - Radio Waves, Infrared, Visible Light
- Ultraviolet, X-rays, ?-rays
- Commonly used today to describe particle radiation
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NUCLEAR REACTIONS PRODUCE RADIATION
- Protons and neutrons determine nuclear reactions
- One must understand atomic structure to
understand radiation
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NUCLEAR PARTICLES
Protons and Neutrons are the two basic nuclear
particles. Together they contain practically all
the mass of an atom and are determinants of an
atoms nuclear characteristics.
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RADIOACTIVE DECAY
- Radioactive decay refers to the spontaneous
emission of radiation from the nucleus of an
unstable atomic nucleus
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DEFINITION OF RADIOACTIVE DECAY
Radioactive decay is the process of spontaneous
emission of radiation in the form of particles or
photons from the nuclei of unstable atoms
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CHARACTERISTICS OF RADIOACTIVE DECAY
- It is a natural process in our universe
- It is spontaneous we cannot predict when an
atom will undergo decay
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BASIC TYPES OF RADIOACTIVE DECAY
- Alpha (?) decay
- Occurs when atomic nuclei have too many protons
and neutrons (i.e., Are heavy)
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12ALPHA PARTICLE
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CHARACTERISTICS OF ALPHA PARTICLES
- Consist of 2 protons and 2 neutrons
- Mass of an alpha particle is 4 amu
- Charge 2
- The isotopes Atomic Mass goes down four
- The Atomic Number goes down two
- Are highly ionizing
- Have low penetrating abilities
(only cm in air and mm in water)
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MORE ABOUT ALPHA PARTICLES
- Easily shielded common types of shielding are
paper, cardboard, air, clothing will not
penetrate skin - Health hazard when taken internally
- Not commonly used in medicine
- Common sources smoke detectors
(Am-241) and lantern mantles (thorium nitrate)
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15ALPHA PARTICLE DECAY
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- Changes both the mass and identity of the nucleus
of the parent radionuclide - This means that the decay results in the
formation of a new element as the daughter
product
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QUESTIONS?
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18NEGATIVE BETA (ß-) DECAY
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Occurs when atoms have too many neutrons (i.e.,
Are neutron-rich) and decay by emitting a
negative beta particle (ß-)
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WHAT ARE NEGATIVE BETA PARTICLES?
During negative beta decay, neutrons are
converted into protons and electrons. The protons
remain in the nucleus but the new electrons are
emitted as negative beta particles (ß-) or
negatrons. You may wish to think of them as
nuclear electrons.
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CHARACTERISTICS OF NEGATIVE BETA DECAY
- Less ionizing than alphas due to decreased mass
of negatrons - Changes the identity of the nucleus but not the
mass - The Atomic Number is increased by one due to
conversion of
neutrons
into protons
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22CHARACTERISTICS OF NEGATIVE BETA PARTICLES
(NEGATRONS)
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- Negatrons consist of nuclear electrons
- The mass is the same as electrons
- There is a charge of 1 in negatrons
- More penetrating than alpha particles 12
meters in air - They can penetrate skin
best shielding is wood,
plastics, thick
cardboard, etc.
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QUESTIONS?
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24 GAMMA (?) EMISSION
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Is a form of pure electromagnetic radiation
emitted from nuclei that have excess energy. It
is sometimes called gamma photon radiation.
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25 GAMMA RAYS
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Are photons emitted from unstable nuclei to rid
themselves of excess energy. Gamma photons are
subatomic packets of pure energy. They are
higher in energy and more penetrating than
thephotons that make up visible light.
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PROPERTIES OF GAMMA (?) RAYS
- Charge is 0 (no charge)
- Mass is 0 (no mass)
- Low ionization
- Penetration abilities can be extremely high
penetrating power is
dependent upon the
energy of the
emitted photons
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QUESTIONS?
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30What is a packet of light energy that behaves
like a particle?
- Positron
- Negatron
- Megatron
- Photon
31Which form of radiation penetrates the least?
- Alpha Decay
- Beta Decay
- Gamma Decay
- Delta Decay
32Which radioactive particle increases the Parent
Nucleuss atomic number?
- Alpha Particle
- Beta Particle
- Gamma Particle
- Delta Particle
33Which form of radiation penetrates the most?
- Alpha Decay
- Beta Decay
- Gamma Decay
- Delta Decay
34Which particle drops the Parent Nucleuss atomic
number by two?
- Alpha Particle
- Beta Particle
- Gamma Particle
- Delta Particle
35Which particle resembles a Helium nucleus?
- Alpha Particle
- Beta Particle
- Gamma Particle
- Delta Particle
36Which particle isnt a particle but a photon?
- Alpha Particle
- Beta Particle
- Gamma Particle
- Delta Particle
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38Turn to page 5
- the first answer you should have for box set 3
is
39Turn to page 6
- the last answer you should have for box set 12
is
40Decay Systems
- Each radioactive element will undergo various
forms of radiation until it becomes stable - The particular elements that a Parent Nucleus
changes into are always the same - This path is a Decay System
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42Half-life
Original Amount of ? Current Amount
100g 1 50g
100g 2 25g
100g 3 12.5g
100g 4 6.25g
100g 5 3.125g
- The amount of time it takes for HALF of an amount
of a radioactive material to decay - One symbol for half-life is ? (lambda)
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47A Decay System showing half-lives
48Practice
- 1. An isotope of cesium (cesium-137) has a
half-life of 30 yrs. If 1.0 mg of cesium-137
disintegrates over a period of 90 yrs., how many
mg of cesium-137 would remain?
(1) 1.0mg ? 30yrs
(2) 0.5mg ? 60yrs
(3) 0.25mg ? 90yrs
0.125mg
49Practice
- The half-life of Po-218 is three minutes. How
much of a 2.0 gram sample remains after 15
minutes?
(2) 1.0g ? 6min
(3) 0.5g ? 9min
(4) 0.25g ? 12min
(4) 0.125g ? 15min
0.0625g
(1) 2.0g ? 3min
50Practice
- 3. A 2.5 gram sample of an isotope of
strontium-90 was formed in a 1960 explosion of an
atomic bomb at Johnson Island in the Pacific Test
site. The half-life of strontium-90 is 28 yrs.
In what year will only 0.625 grams of this
strontium-90 remain?
56yrs to get to 0.625 grams started in 1960
1960 56 2016
(2) 1.25g ? 56yrs
0.625g
(1) 2.5g ? 28yrs
51Practice
- 5. Sodium-25 was to be used in an experiment,
but it took 3.0 minutes to get the sodium from
the reactor to the laboratory. If 5.0 mg of
sodium-25 was removed from the reactor, how many
mg of sodium-25 were placed in the reaction
vessel 3.0 minutes later if the half-life of
sodium-25 is 60 seconds?
52Nuclear Processes
- Fission
- The splitting of a large, unstable nucleus into
two or more stable nuclei - Scientists can cause fission by injecting a
neutron at high speed - These are the uses associated with nuclear
fission - Power plants / reactors
- Bombs
- Dirty bombs
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55Nuclear Processes
- Fusion
- The joining of two or more smaller nuclei into
one larger, more stable nucleus - Scientists are working on fusion using high
pressures, temperatures, and lasers - The only place that fusion occurs naturally is
stars
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57Chernobyl Disaster
- April 26, 1986 flawed reactor design was
operated by inadequately trained personnel and
w/o regard to safety
58Chernobyl Disaster
- Result steam explosion and fire released at
least 5 of the radioactive reactor core into the
atmosphere downwind - 28 people died within 4 months from radiation or
thermal burns - 19 subsequently died and 9 deaths from thyroid
cancer
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60TERMS TO REVIEW
- Radiation Alpha decay
- Alpha particle Radioactive decay
- Negatron Negative beta decay
- X-ray
- Gamma ray Photon
- Half-Life
- Decay Systems
- Mother Nucleus Daughter Nuclei
- Fission Fusion
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61Half-life
- 4. Thallium-201 has a half-life of 73 hours. If
4.0 mg of thallium-201 disintegrates over a
period of 6.0 days and 2 hours, how many mg of
thallium-201 will remain?
62Half-life
- 6. The half-life of isotope X is 2.0 years. How
many years would it take for a 4.0 mg sample of X
to decay and have only 0.50 mg of it remain?
63Half-life
- 3. Actinium-226 has a half-life of 29 hours. If
100 mg of actinium-226 disintegrates over a
period of 58 hours, how many mg of actinium-226
will remain?
64Half-life
- 7. Selenium-83 has a half-life of 25.0 minutes.
How many minutes would it take for a 10.0 mg
sample to decay and have only 1.25 mg of it
remain?
65Half-life
- 8. Element-106 has a half-life of 0.90 seconds.
If one million atoms of it were prepared, how
many atoms would remain after 4.5 seconds?
66Half-life
- 9. The half-life of Po-218 is three minutes.
How much of a 2.0 gram sample remains after 15
minutes? Suppose you wanted to buy some of this
isotope, and it required half an hour for it to
reach you. How much should you order if you need
to use 0.10 gram of this material?
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- 10. Three grams of Bismuth-218 decay to 0.375
grams in one hour. What is the half-life of this
isotope?
68Half-life
- 11. The half-life of francium is 21 minutes.
Starting with 4 x 1018 atoms of francium, how
many atoms would disintegrate in 1 hour and 45
minutes? What fraction of the original sample
remains?
69Half-life
- 12. The half-life of a radioactive element is 30
seconds. In what period of time would the
activity of the sample be reduced to
one-sixteenth of the original activity?