Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

½ - life The decay of a single nuclei is totally random

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "½ - life The decay of a single nuclei is totally random"— Presentation transcript:

1 ½ - life The decay of a single nuclei is totally random
However, with large numbers of atoms a pattern does occur

2 ½ - life This is the time it takes half the nuclei to decay
half-life (t½) Number of nuclei undecayed time

3 ½ - life This is the time it takes half the nuclei to decay
Number of nuclei undecayed time half-life (t½)

4 ½ - life This is the time it takes half the nuclei to decay
Number of nuclei undecayed A graph of the count rate against time will be the same shape time half-life (t½)

5 Different ½ - lives Different isotopes have different half-lives
The ½-life could be a few milliseconds or 5000 million years! Number of nuclei undecayed time half-life (t½)

6 Example

7 Example A radio-isotope has an activity of 400 Bq and a half-life of 8 days. After 32 days the activity of the sample is A – 200 Bq B – 100 Bq C – 50 Bq D – 25 Bq

8 Example A sample contains an amount of radioactive material with a half-life of 3.5 days. After 2 weeks the fraction of the radioactive material remaining is A. 94 %. B. 25 %. C. 6 %. D. 0 %.

9 Example Nuclide X has a half-life of 1 day and nuclide Y has a half-life of 5 days. In a particular sample, the activities of X and Y are found to be equal. When the activity is tested again after 10 days, the activity will be A. entirely due to nuclide X. B. due equally to nuclides X and Y. C. mostly due to nuclide X. D. mostly due to nuclide Y.

10 Nuclear Reactions

11 Transmutation changing a nucleus by adding nucleons.

12 Fusion is the process by which two or more atomic nuclei join together, or "fuse", to form a single heavier nucleus.

13 Fission either a nuclear reaction or a radioactive decay process in which the nucleus of an atom splits into smaller parts (lighter nuclei).

14 Unified mass unit (u) Defined as 1/12 of the mass of an atom of Carbon-12 u = x kg

15 Energy mass equivalence
E = mc2 E = x x ( x 108)2 E = x J Remembering 1 eV = x J 1 u = MeV

16 Mass defect For helium, the mass of the nucleus = 4.00156 u
But, the mass of two protons and two neutrons = u!!!! Where is the missing mass?

17 Mass defect The missing mass (mass defect) has been stored as energy in the nucleus. It is called the binding energy of the nucleus. It can be found from E = mc2

18 Mass defect calculation
Find the mass defect of the nucleus of gold, Au

19 Mass defect calculation
The mass of this isotope is u Since it has 79 electrons its nuclear mass is u – 79x u = u

20 Mass defect calculation
The mass of this isotope is u Since it has 79 electrons its nuclear mass is u – 79x u = u This nucleus has 79 protons and 118 neutrons, individually these have a mass of 79x u + 118x u = u

21 Mass defect calculation
The mass of this isotope is u Since it has 79 electrons its nuclear mass is u – 79x u = u This nucleus has 79 protons and 118 neutrons, individually these have a mass of 79x u + 118x u = u The difference in mass (mass defect) is therefore 1.156u

22 Mass defect calculation
The difference in mass (mass defect) is therefore 1.156u This “missing mass” is stored as energy in the nucleus (binding energy). 1u is equivalent to MeV

23 Binding energy This is the work required to completely separate the nucleons of the nucleus.

24 Binding energy per nucleon
This is the work required to completely separate the nucleons of the nucleus divided by the number of nucleons. It is a measure of how stable the nucleus is.

25 The binding energy curve

26 Example

27

28 Nuclear Fission

29 Uranium Uranium 235 has a large unstable nucleus.                                                                  

30 Capture A lone neutron hitting the nucleus can be captured by the nucleus, forming Uranium 236.

31 Capture A lone neutron hitting the nucleus can be captured by the nucleus, forming Uranium 236.

32 Fission The Uranium 236 is very unstable and splits into two smaller nuclei (this is called nuclear fission)

33 Free neutrons As well as the two smaller nuclei (called daughter nuclei), two neutrons are released (with lots of kinetic energy)

34 Fission These free neutrons can strike more uranium nuclei, causing them to split.

35 Chain Reaction If there is enough uranium (critical mass) a chain reaction occurs. Huge amounts of energy are released very quickly.                                                                                                                                    

36 Chain Reaction If there is enough uranium (critical mass) a chain reaction occurs. Huge amounts of energy are released very quickly.                                                                                                                                    

37 Bang! This can result in a nuclear explosion!YouTube - nuclear bomb 4

38

39 Nuclear fusion – Star power!

40 The binding energy curve


Download ppt "½ - life The decay of a single nuclei is totally random"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google