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Nuclear.

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Presentation on theme: "Nuclear."— Presentation transcript:

1 Nuclear

2 Isotopes Isotopes are atoms of an element with different mass numbers
They have the same number of protons, but different numbers of neutrons Many Isotopes are radioactive

3 Isotopic symbols they are written by writing the symbol of the element and then to the left side of the symbol write the mass number on top and the number of protons below

4 Radioactivity The spontaneous decay of the nucleus of an atom
When an atom decays energy and particle are given off from the nucleus

5 Band of Stability n = p Number of neutrons Number of protons 160 150
140 130 120 110 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 Band of Stability n = p Number of neutrons The band of black squares, which shows the stable nuclides, is known as the band of stability. In general, the further a nuclide is from the band of stability, the shorter the half-life of the nuclide. No stable isotopes are known for elements with atomic numbers higher than 83 (bismuth). Stable nuclides Naturally occurring radioactive nuclides Other known nuclides Number of protons

6 Nuclear Decay Why nuclides decay… b a
need stable ratio of neutrons to protons 120 100 80 60 40 20 Neutrons (A-Z) Protons (Z) P = N b stable nuclei a e-capture or e+ emission Courtesy Christy Johannesson DECAY SERIES TRANSPARENCY

7 Nuclear Decay Why nuclides decay… b a
need stable ratio of neutrons to protons stable nuclei P = N b stable nuclei a P = N 120 120 e-capture or e+ emission 100 100 80 80 60 60 Neutrons (A-Z) Neutrons (A-Z) 40 40 20 20 20 40 60 80 100 120 20 40 60 80 100 120 Protons (Z) Protons (Z)

8 Discovery of the Neutron
+ + Chadwick is credited with the discovery of the neutron as a result of this transmutation experiment. James Chadwick bombarded beryllium-9 with alpha particles, carbon-12 atoms were formed, and neutrons were emitted. Dorin, Demmin, Gabel, Chemistry The Study of Matter 3rd Edition, page 764

9 Types of Radiation Type Symbol Charge Mass (amu) Alpha particle 2+
Beta particle 1- Positron 1+ Gamma ray

10

11 Nuclear Decay Numbers must balance!! Alpha Emission parent nuclide
daughter nuclide alpha particle Numbers must balance!! Courtesy Christy Johannesson

12 Nuclear Decay Beta Emission electron Positron Emission positron
Courtesy Christy Johannesson

13 Half-Lives of Isotopes
Half-Lives and Radiation of Some Naturally Occurring Radioisotopes Isotope Half-Live Radiation emitted Carbon-14 5.73 x 103 years b Potassium-40 1.25 x 109 years b, g Radon-222 3.8 days a Radium-226 1.6 x 103 years a, g Thorium-230 7.54 x 104 years a, g Thorium-234 24.1 days b, g Uranium-235 7.0 x 108 years a, g Uranium-238 4.46 x 109 years a

14 Half-Life Plot Half-life of iodine-131 is 8 days
20 Half-life of iodine-131 is 8 days 15 1 half-life Amount of odine-131 (g) 10 16 2 half-lives 5 24 3 half-lives 32 4 half-lives etc… 40 48 56 8 Time (days) Timberlake, Chemistry 7th Edition, page 104

15 Half-Life Half-life (t½)
Time required for half the atoms of a radioactive nuclide to decay. Shorter half-life = less stable. 1/1 Newly formed rock Potassium Argon Calcium Ratio of Remaining Potassium-40 Atoms to Original Potassium-40 Atoms 1/2 1/4 1/8 1/16 1 half-life 1.3 1 half-lives 2.6 3 half-lives 3.9 1 half-lives 5.2 Time (billions of years)

16 Half-Life Half-life (t½)
Time required for half the atoms of a radioactive nuclide to decay. Shorter half-life = less stable. 1/1 1/2 1/4 1/8 1/16 Ratio of Remaining Potassium-40 Atoms to Original Potassium-40 Atoms 1 half-life 1.3 1 half-lives 2.6 3 half-lives 3.9 5.2 Time (billions of years) Newly formed rock Potassium Argon Calcium

17 Fission Fission is a manmade process for splitting atoms where a nucleus is made unstable by bombarding it with a neutron, which starts and a chain reaction

18 Fission Fission releases an enormous amount of energy with no pollution However it also leaves the nucleuses of the bombarded atoms unstable and radioactive for many years

19 Uses for fission Fission is used in weapon- the atomic bomb uses fission Fission is also used by nuclear power plant to produce electricity The energy that comes from fission is explained by Einstein’s equation E= mc2

20 Fusion The process of atomic nuclei combining with each other when they collide at very high speeds. Releases even more energy than Fission. Scientist are still unable to control this reaction. This is the reaction that powers the sun

21 Fusion

22 QuickWrite Explain the difference between Alpha, Beta, Gamma Radiation. Use words like Decay, Isotopes, Electron, and Positron.


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