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Isotopes - What are they? A Nuclear Chemistry Introduction

Isotopes - What are they?

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Isotopes - What are they?. A Nuclear Chemistry Introduction. Isotopes - What are they?. Find the number of protons, electrons, and neutrons for Nitrogen… What if one of these atoms had an extra neutron. Would it still be nitrogen? Why or why not? Why are the actual atomic masses decimals?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Isotopes - What are they?

Isotopes - What are they?A Nuclear Chemistry Introduction

Page 2: Isotopes - What are they?

Isotopes - What are they?

• Find the number of protons, electrons, and neutrons for Nitrogen…

• What if one of these atoms had an extra neutron. Would it still be nitrogen? Why or why not?

• Why are the actual atomic masses decimals?

Page 3: Isotopes - What are they?

Isotopes

• While the number of protons for a given element never changes, the number of neutrons can change.

• An atom of the same element with a different number of neutrons is an ISOTOPE!

• If the number of neutrons changes, so does the mass. Different isotopes will have different mass numbers for the same element.

Page 4: Isotopes - What are they?

Isotopes

What element do these isotopes represent?

What about these two isotopes?

Page 5: Isotopes - What are they?
Page 6: Isotopes - What are they?

Writing symbols for isotopes• How do you tell the difference between different

types of the same element?

• The symbol of the element is always written first then the mass number

• Example: C-14– “C” is the symbol– “-14” tells you it is an isotope with a mass of 14– You cannot change the number of protons so you know that

this carbon atom has 2 more neutrons than usual

Page 7: Isotopes - What are they?

Radioactivity & Isotopes• What are radioactive elements?

– Isotopes with an unstable nucleus– The nuclei of these isotopes spontaneously

break apart, forming different elements– The number of protons and/or neutrons

change

• Why are some isotopes radioactive?– They just are, but do occur when there is a

large difference between the number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus

– We call them RADIOISOTOPES

Page 8: Isotopes - What are they?

•An atom is generally stable if the number of protons equals or is close to the number of neutrons in the nucleus.

•The further apart the two numbers the more unstable.

Stable vs. Unstable Isotopes

Atom (Isotope) Protons Neutrons

Carbon 12Carbon 12 66 66

Nitrogen 14Nitrogen 14 77 77

Oxygen 16Oxygen 16 88 88

Carbon 14 6 8

Page 9: Isotopes - What are they?

The line of stability

Isotopes on either side of The valley of stability areradioactive

Page 10: Isotopes - What are they?

Isotopes & sports• Floyd Landis stripped of his Tour de

France title

• Isotopes found in his blood came from synthetic testosterone.

Page 11: Isotopes - What are they?
Page 12: Isotopes - What are they?

Losing your Identity…

The number of protons (atomic number) changes

14

6

14

7

Radioactive Decay causes the nucleus of an atom to change. If the protons change it will change into a new element

Page 13: Isotopes - What are they?
Page 14: Isotopes - What are they?

• Radiometric Dating

Page 15: Isotopes - What are they?

Calculating the average atomic mass

• The abundance (percentage) of each individual isotope is multiplied by the mass of that isotope.

• All the individual abundances are added together

• This is the average mass (what is on the periodic table).

Page 16: Isotopes - What are they?

Calculating the average atomic mass

• Element “X”• Natural abundance

of isotope X• 10% = 4 amu• 30 % = 5 amu• 60 % = 6 amu

• 0.10 x 4 = 0.4 amu• 0.30 x 5 = 1.5 amu• 0.60 x 6 = 3.6 amu• 0.4 + 1.5 + 3.6 = 5.5• Average mass = 5.5

amu• This is the mass on

the periodic table

Page 17: Isotopes - What are they?

Practice

• Element Q• 25% = 15 amu• 10% = 16 amu• 10% = 17 amu• 55% = 18 amu

• Find the average mass

• 0.25 x 15 = 3.75• 0.10 x 16 =1.6• 0.10 x 17 = 1.7• 0.55 x 18 =9.9

• Total = 16.95• Average = 16.95 amu