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Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I. Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications of Radioactivity

Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

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Page 1: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Chemistry 142Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry

OutlineI. Types of RadiationII. Nuclear EquationsIII. Radioactive DecayIV. Applications of Radioactivity

Page 2: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Tro, Chemistry: A Molecular Approach

2

Image left by uranic rays

Page 3: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Types of Radiation and Their Penetrating Abilities

ab g

0.01 mm 1 mm 100 mm

Pieces of Lead

Page 4: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Types of radioactive decay• alpha particle

emission

Page 5: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Types of radioactive decay• beta emission

Page 6: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Types of radioactive decay• positron

emission

Page 7: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Biological Effect of Radiation

Page 8: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

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Page 9: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications
Page 10: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

23.1

Page 11: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Stability

Page 12: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Tro, Chemistry: A Molecular Approach

12

Valley of Stability

for Z = 1 20, stable N/Z ≈ 1

for Z = 20 40, stable N/Z approaches 1.25

for Z = 40 80, stable N/Z approaches 1.5

for Z > 83, there are no stable nuclei

Page 13: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications
Page 14: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications
Page 15: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Tro, Chemistry: A Molecular Approach

15

U-238 Decay Series

a b b a a a

a

bababba

or ababbab

or other combinations

Page 16: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Tro, Chemistry: A Molecular Approach

16

Detecting Radioactivity Film Badge Electroscope

+++ +++

Page 17: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Tro's Introductory Chemistry, Chapter 17

17

Detecting Radioactivity Geiger-Müller Counter (Geiger Counter)

Page 18: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Tro, Chemistry: A Molecular Approach

18

Half-Life of a First-Order Reaction Is Constant

Page 19: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Chapter 19 – Nuclear ChemistryExample – Half-Life

19.1 Technetium-99m is used to form pictures of internal organs in the body;

Particularly to assess heart damage. The rate constant, k, for Tc-99m is 1.16 x 10-1 hr-1,

what is the half-life?

Page 20: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Chapter 19 – Nuclear ChemistryExample – Half-Life

19.2 The half-life of molybdenum-99 is 67.0 hours. How much of a 1.000 mg sample

of Mo-99 is left after 335 hours?

Page 21: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Chapter 19 – Nuclear ChemistryExample – Half-Life

19.3 Sodium-24 decays by positron emission, has a half-life of 60 hours, and an atomic mass of

23.9909633 amu. Suppose that a patient is injected with 80. mg of sodium-24 to measure their sodium electrolyte balance.

a. How much remains after 75 hours?b. How many positron emissions occur in 75 hours?c. What dose of radiation (in Ci) is the person

exposed to?

Page 22: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Radiocarbon Dating of Artifacts

Page 23: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Calibration Curves for Radiocarbon Dating

Page 24: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Chapter 19 – Nuclear ChemistryExample – Radioactive Dating

19.4 The remnants of an ancient fire in a cave in Africa showed a carbon-14 decay rate of

3.1 counts per minutes per gram of carbon. Assuming that the decay rate of carbon-14 in freshly cut wood is 13.6 counts per minutes per gram of carbon, calculate the age of the remnants (t1/2 C-14 is 5730 years).

Page 25: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Chapter 19 – Nuclear ChemistryExample – Radioactive Dating

19.5 A rock containing uranium-238 and lead-206 was examined to determine its approximate age. Analysis showed the ratio of lead-206

atoms to uranium-238 atoms to be 0.115. Assuming no lead was originally present, that all the lead-206 formed over the years has remained in the rock and that the number of nuclides in intermediate stages of decay between uranium-238 and lead-206 is negligible, calculate the age of the rock

(t1/2 U-238 is 4.5 x 109 years).

Page 26: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Tro, Chemistry: A Molecular Approach

26

Fission

Page 27: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Nuclear Fission

23.5

235U + 1n 90Sr + 143Xe + 31n + Energy92 54380 0

Representative fission reaction

Page 28: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Tro, Chemistry: A Molecular Approach

28

Tokamak Fusion Reactor

Page 29: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Tro, Chemistry: A Molecular Approach

29

Cyclotron

Page 30: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Tro, Chemistry: A Molecular Approach

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Linear Accelerator

Page 31: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

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Page 32: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Chapter 19 – Nuclear ChemistryExample – Binding Energy

19.6 Calculate the binding energy per nucleon for the helium-4 nucleus. Given the

atomic mass of helium-4 is 4.0026 amu, a proton is 1.67493 x 10-24 g and a neutron is 1.67266 x 10-24 g.

(1 amu = 1.66053873 x 10-24 g)

Page 33: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Tro, Chemistry: A Molecular Approach

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Page 34: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Fat Man and Little Boy

Page 35: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications
Page 36: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications
Page 37: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Nuclear Power Use

Page 38: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Tro, Chemistry: A Molecular Approach

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Page 39: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

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PLWR

Core

ContainmentBuilding

Turbine

Condenser

ColdWater

Boiler

Page 40: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

40

PLWR - Core

ColdWater

FuelRods

HotWate

rControl

Rods

Page 41: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

UT 10/1/03

Page 42: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

UT 10/1/03

Page 43: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications
Page 44: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications
Page 45: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Sources of Radiation

Page 46: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Quantities of Radiation

Unit Parameter Description

Curie (Ci) Level of Radioactivity

3.7x1010 nuclear disintegrations/s

Becquerel (B)*Level of

Radioactivity 1 disintegration/s

Gray (Gy)Ionizing Energy

Absorbed1 Gy = 1 J/kg of tissue

mass

Sievert (Sv)Amount of Tissue

Damage 1Sv = 1Gy x RBE**

*SI unit of radioactivity **Relative Biological Effectiveness

Page 47: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Tro, Chemistry: A Molecular Approach

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Page 48: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Physiological Effect of a Single Dose of Radiation

Dose (rem) Dose (Sv) Likely Effect

0-25 0-0.25 No observable effect

25-50 0.25-0.50 White blood cell count decreases slightly

50-100 0.50-1.00 Significant drop in white blood cell count, lesions

100-200 1-2 Nausea, vomiting, loss of hair

200-500 2-5 Hemorrhaging, ulcers, possible death

>500 >5 Death

Page 49: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Isotope Symbol Decay Half-Life Use

tritium 3H b 12.32 y Biochemical tracer

carbon-14 14C b 5715 y Archaeological Dating

phosphorus-32 32P b 14.28 d Leukemia Therapy

potassium-40 40K b 1.26×109 y Geologic Dating

cobalt-60 60Co , b 5.27 y Cancer Therapy

iodine-123 123I 13.1 h Thyroid Therapy

uranium-235 235U , 7.04×108 y Nuclear Reactors

Page 50: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Tro, Chemistry: A Molecular Approach

50

Medical Applications of Radioisotopes

Bone Scan with 99mTc

Brain images with 123I-labeled compound

Page 51: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Chemistry In Action: Food Irradiation

Dosage Effect

Up to 100 kiloradInhibits sprouting of potatoes, onions, garlics. Inactivates trichinae in pork. Kills or prevents insects from reproducing in grains, fruits, and vegetables.

100 – 1000 kilorads Delays spoilage of meat poultry and fish. Reduces salmonella. Extends shelf life of some fruit.

1000 to 10,000 kiloradsSterilizes meat, poultry and fish. Kills insects and microorganisms in spices and seasoning.

Page 52: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Applications – Chemical Analysis

• Radioactive tracer – used to follow fate of a chemical using radio labeling

• Isotopic dilution – used to determine quantity of a substance when you can’t measure it conveniently

• Neutron Activation Analysis – used to determine concentration of trace elements

Page 53: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications

Applications

• Medicine – Diagnostic tracers

• PET – Positron Emission Tomography• Patient fed radio-labeled glucose and it goes to where there is

lots of metabolic activity. This often indicates a region of tumor activity.

– Chemotherapy – Power pacemakers

Page 54: Chemistry 142 Chapter 19: Radioactivity and Nuclear Chemistry Outline I.Types of Radiation II.Nuclear Equations III.Radioactive Decay IV.Applications