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Nuclear Equations In nuclear equations, we balance nucleons (protons and neutrons). The atomic number (number of protons) and the mass number (number of nucleons) are conserved during the reaction.

Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

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Page 1: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Nuclear Equations

In nuclear equations, we balance

nucleons (protons and neutrons). The

atomic number (number of protons) and

the mass number (number of nucleons)

are conserved during the reaction.

Page 2: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Nuclear Equations

Alpha Decay

Page 3: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Nuclear Equations

Beta Decay

Page 4: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Nuclear Equations

Beta Decay

Page 5: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Nuclear Equations

Positron Emission: A positron is a particle

equal in mass to an electron but with opposite

charge.

Page 6: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Nuclear Equations

Electron Capture: A nucleus absorbs an

electron from the inner shell.

Page 7: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Nuclear Equations

Page 8: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

EXAMPLE 4.1 Balancing Nuclear Equations

Write balanced nuclear equations for each of the

following processes. In each case, indicate what new

element is formed.

a. Plutonium-239 emits an alpha particle when it

decays.

b. Protactinium-234 undergoes beta decay.

c. Carbon-11 emits a positron when it decays.

d. Carbon-11 undergoes electron capture.

Page 9: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Write balanced nuclear equations for each of the

following processes. In each case, indicate what new

element is formed.

a. Radium-226 decays by alpha emission.

b. Sodium-24 undergoes beta decay.

c. Gold-188 decays by positron emission.

d. Argon-37 undergoes electron capture.

Exercise 4.1

EXAMPLE 4.1 Balancing Nuclear Equations continued

Page 10: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

In the upper atmosphere, a nitrogen-14 nucleus absorbs

a neutron. A carbon-14 nucleus and another particle are

formed. What is the other particle?

EXAMPLE 4.2

5

More Nuclear Equations

Page 11: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Half-Life

Half-life of a radioactive sample is the

time required for ½ of the material to

undergo radioactive decay.

Page 12: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Half-Life

Page 13: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Half-Life

Fraction Remaining = 1/2n

Page 14: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Half-life

T1/2 = 0.693/ k(decay constant)

If you know how much you started with and

how much you ended with, then you can

determine the number of half-lives.

If you also know the start and end time, you

can divide the time by the number of half-

lives to give you the T1/2.

Page 15: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Half-life

To determine starting amounts or ending

amounts:

ln(Nt/No) = -kt

Nt is the number of radioactive nuclei at your

ending

No is the number of radioactive nuclei at the

start

K is the decay constant

Page 16: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Radioisotopic Dating

Page 17: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Radioisotopic Dating

Carbon-14 Dating: The half-life of

carbon-14 is 5730 years. Carbon-14 is

formed in the upper atmosphere by the

bombardment of ordinary nitrogen atoms

by neutrons from cosmic rays.

Page 18: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Radioisotopic Dating

Tritium Dating: Tritium is a radioactive

isotope of hydrogen. It has a half-life of

12.26 years and can be used for dating

objects up to 100 years old.

Page 19: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Nuclear Chain Reaction

Fission of one

nucleus produces

neutrons that can

cause the fission of

other nuclei, thus

setting off a chain

reaction.

Page 20: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Manhattan Project

The Manhattan Project was launched by

President Roosevelt in 1939. It consisted

of 4 separate research teams attempting

to:

a. Sustain the nuclear fission reaction.

b. Enrich uranium.

c. Make fissionable plutonium-239.

d. Construct a fission atomic bomb.

Page 21: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Manhattan Project

Replicas of “Little Boy”

(dropped on Hiroshima)

and “Fat Man”

(dropped on Nagasaki).

Page 22: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Manhattan Project

Mushroom cloud over

Nagasaki from the

detonation of “Fat

Man,” August 9, 1945.

Page 23: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Radioactive Fallout

Many radioactive isotopes are produced in a nuclear

bomb blast. Some are particularly harmful to humans.

Among these are strontium-90 and iodine-131.

Strontium-90: Half-life = 28.5 years, chemically similar to

calcium. Obtained from dairy and vegetable products

and accumulates in bone.

Iodine-131: Half-life = 8 days. Concentrates in the thyroid

glands.

Page 24: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

Nuclear Power Plants

Civilian nuclear power plants use less

enriched uranium (2.5-3.5% uranium-235

rather than 90% for weapons-grade).

The nuclear chain reaction is controlled

for the slow release of heat energy. The

heat is used to make steam, which turns a

turbine to produce electricity.

Page 25: Chapter 4 Nuclear Chemistry · 2017. 10. 18. · Positron Emission: A positron is a particle equal in mass to an electron but with opposite charge. Nuclear Equations Electron Capture:

The Nuclear Age