Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

The Nucleus Chapter 18. Atomic Symbol Notation Atomic Number Mass Number.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "The Nucleus Chapter 18. Atomic Symbol Notation Atomic Number Mass Number."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Nucleus Chapter 18

2 Atomic Symbol Notation Atomic Number Mass Number

3 Some Common Nuclides

4 Decay Particles Alpha Particle Beta Particle Gamma Ray Stopped by heavy clothing, skin, does great amount of surface damage. Converted to alpha particle by lead, does widespread damage. Penetrates most substances. Is made of energy rather than matter.

5 More Decay Particles Neutron Positron

6 Nuclear Reactions: Alpha Particle Production Spontaneous Fission Positron Production Electron Capture

7 Try Me! Write out the nuclear equations: 11 6 C produces a positron 214 83 Bi produces a beta particle 237 93 Np produces an alpha particle

8 Stability of element’s nucleus

9 The Band of Stability Small elements can support a 1:1 proton:neutron ratio. Larger elements need more neutrons to make it stable!

10 Thermostability of Nuclei Remember how Einstein said “E=mc 2 ”? It means that energy has mass. Tiny differences in mass of a nucleus during a nuclear reaction is due to the change in energy. The change in mass is called the mass defect. The quantity of energy required to decompose a nucleus in a decay reaction is called the binding energy.

11 Rate = Rate of Decay We use a negative sign because the number of original nuclides is decreasing. Half-life is given by the integrated first order rate law. ln (A/A o ) = - kt

12 Try Me The rate constant for the decay of Technetium-99 is known to be 1.16 x 10 -1 h -1. What is the half-life of this nuclide?

13 Radioactivity Dating Carbon-14 is used for dating artifacts, though technically this process can be used on most radioisotopes. –A small percentage of all carbon present in the universe is carbon-14. This percentage is constant in all living things.

14 –When an organism dies, the carbon-14 supply is not replaced, so whatever decays stays decayed –Measurements of original quantities of nuclides and current quantities allow dendrochronologists and other archeologist types to date dead organic materials.

15 Try this out. The half-life of carbon-14 is 5730 years. An old piece of fire wood, found in a cave in Africa, has a carbon-14 decay rate of 3.1 counts per minute per gram. Assuming the decay rate of freshly cut wood is 13.6 counts/minute/gram, calculate the age of the old log.

16 Try Again A rock containing and was examined to determine its approximate age. Analysis showed the ratio of atoms to atoms to be 0.115. Asssuming no lead was originally present, that all of the lead formed remained in the rock, and intermediate forms of decay are negligible, calculate the age of the rock. The half life of uranium-238 is 4.5 x 10 9 years.

17 Nuclear Fission A large nucleus, bombarded by a neutron, becomes unstable and splits into two smaller nuclei. This is an exothermic process, since stable nuclei have less energy than unstable nuclei.

18 Chain Reactions A self-sustaining fission reaction that is caused by the production of one or more neutrons as products. Critical Subcritical Supercritical Critical Mass

19 Nuclear Fusion Two small nuclei combine to produce a larger, more stable nucleus and at least one neutron. This is an exothermic reaction, since stable nuclei have less energy than unstable.

20 Nuclear Transformations The process of changing one element’s nucleus into another. Particle Accelerators Magnets Circular or Linear

21 CERN: Particle Accelerator Game: Cern50.web.cern.ch/cern50/multimedia/LHCGame/StartGame.html CERN movies

22 Detection Methods Geiger Counter Tube of argon gas is ionized by radioactive particles. Amplifier changes energy from the ionization into a noise. Scintillation Counter Much more sensitive than a Geiger counter. Light sensitive machinery records the flashes when radioactive particles emit energy.

23 Nuclear Reactors

24 Effects of Radiation Somatic Damage: sickness, death, organism is harmed directly. Genetic Damage: no immediate damage is noticed. Offspring experience effects. Your radiation exposure: http://www.epa.gov/rpdweb00/understand/ca lculate.html

25 Factors Impacting Effects 1.Energy of Radiation (rads): more energy,more damage 2.Penetrating Ability of Radiation: alpha<beta<gamma 3.Properties of Radiation Source What kind of particle is produced? How long does it take to decay? Does it get metabolized by body?

26 Medical Uses of Nuclides Radiotracers Iodine for Thyroid Thallium and Technetium-99m for Heart X rays


Download ppt "The Nucleus Chapter 18. Atomic Symbol Notation Atomic Number Mass Number."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google