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Nuclear Chemistry Radioactive Decay. A. Types of Radiation  Alpha particle (  )  helium nucleus paper 2+  Beta particle (  -)  electron 1- lead.

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Presentation on theme: "Nuclear Chemistry Radioactive Decay. A. Types of Radiation  Alpha particle (  )  helium nucleus paper 2+  Beta particle (  -)  electron 1- lead."— Presentation transcript:

1 Nuclear Chemistry Radioactive Decay

2 A. Types of Radiation  Alpha particle (  )  helium nucleus paper 2+  Beta particle (  -)  electron 1- lead  Positron (  +)  positron 1+  Gamma (  )  high-energy photon 0 concrete

3 Strength of radiation……

4 B. Nuclear Decay  Alpha Emission parent nuclide daughter nuclide alpha particle Numbers must balance!!

5 B. Nuclear Decay  Beta Emission electron  Positron Emission positron

6 B. Nuclear Decay  Electron Capture electron  Gamma Emission  Usually follows other types of decay.  Transmutation  One element becomes another.

7 B. Nuclear Decay  Why nuclides decay…  need stable ratio of neutrons to protons DECAY SERIES TRANSPARENCY

8 C. Half-life  Half-life (t ½ )  Time required for half the atoms of a radioactive nuclide to decay.  Shorter half-life = less stable.

9 C. Half-life m f :final mass m i :initial mass n:# of half-lives

10 C. Half-life  Fluorine-21 has a half-life of 5.0 seconds. If you start with 25 g of fluorine-21, how many grams would remain after 60.0 s? GIVEN: t ½ = 5.0 s m i = 25 g m f = ? total time = 60.0 s n = 60.0s ÷ 5.0s =12 WORK : m f = m i (½) n m f = (25 g)(0.5) 12 m f = 0.0061 g

11 Nuclear Chemistry Fission & Fusion

12 A. F ission  splitting a nucleus into two or more smaller nuclei  1 g of 235 U = 3 tons of coal

13 A. F ission  chain reaction - self-propagating reaction  critical mass - mass required to sustain a chain reaction

14 B. Fusion  combining of two nuclei to form one nucleus of larger mass  thermonuclear reaction – requires temp of 40,000,000 K to sustain  1 g of fusion fuel = 20 tons of coal  occurs naturally in stars

15 C. Fission vs. Fusion  235 U is limited  danger of meltdown  toxic waste  thermal pollution  fuel is abundant  no danger of meltdown  no toxic waste  not yet sustainable FISSIONFISSION FUSIONFUSION

16 Nuclear Chemistry ApplicationsApplications

17 A. Nuclear Power  Fission Reactors Cooling Tower

18 A. Nuclear Power  Fission Reactors

19 A. Nuclear Power  Fusion Reactors (not yet sustainable)

20 A. Nuclear Power  Fusion Reactors (not yet sustainable) Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor Princeton University National Spherical Torus Experiment

21 B. Synthetic Elements  Transuranium Elements  elements with atomic #s above 92  synthetically produced in nuclear reactors and accelerators  most decay very rapidly

22 C. Radioactive Dating  half-life measurements of radioactive elements are used to determine the age of an object  decay rate indicates amount of radioactive material  EX: 14 C - up to 40,000 years 238 U and 40 K - over 300,000 years

23 D. Nuclear Medicine  Radioisotope Tracers  absorbed by specific organs and used to diagnose diseases  Radiation Treatment  larger doses are used to kill cancerous cells in targeted organs  internal or external radiation source Radiation treatment using  -rays from cobalt-60.

24 E. Nuclear Weapons  Atomic Bomb  chemical explosion is used to form a critical mass of 235 U or 239 Pu  fission develops into an uncontrolled chain reaction  Hydrogen Bomb  chemical explosion  fission  fusion  fusion increases the fission rate  more powerful than the atomic bomb

25 F. Others  Food Irradiation   radiation is used to kill bacteria  Radioactive Tracers  explore chemical pathways  trace water flow  study plant growth, photosynthesis  Consumer Products  ionizing smoke detectors - 241 Am


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