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Nuclear Chemistry

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Title: Nuclear Chemistry


1
Nuclear Chemistry
  • ALPHA-Chemistry I-B
  • Chapter 28

2
Wilhelm Roentgen
  • Wilhelm Roentgen
  • Discovered X-rays
  • Was awarded a Nobel Prize for the discovery of
    the mysterious rays

3
Henri Becquerel
  • Henri Becquerel was a part of the group that
    made a the early discoveries of radiation.

4
Marie Curie
  • Marie Curie and her husband made the discovery of
    radiation.
  • She was awarded two Nobel Prizes for her work.

5
The Discovery of Radiation
  • Henri Becquerel (1895) discovered that pitchblend
    (Uranium ore) would expose film. He called it
    radioactivity.
  • Marie and Pierre Curie worked long difficult
    hours and discovered new elements-Radium and
    Polonium

6
Nuclear vs. Ordinary Reactions
  • Ordinary chemical changes (the ones that display
    our indicators of chemical reactions) only
    involve electrons.
  • Nuclear changes involve the nucleus and create
    new atoms.
  • Larger atoms are from fusion
  • Smaller atoms are from fission

7
Radiation
  • Radioactivity or Radiation is the spontaneous
    emission of alpha, beta, or gamma rays the
    disintegration of the nuclei of atoms.

8
Types of Radiation
  • Alpha particles
  • A helium atom doesnt have any electrons
    positively charged.
  • Beta Particles
  • A very fast moving electron
  • Negatively charged
  • Gamma Rays
  • A form of energy lots of energy that moves in
    waves
  • The rays go through a lot of materials.

9
Going for the Block
  • Alpha particles can be blocked by a piece of
    paper however, once inside the body the most
    immediate damage.
  • Beta particles can be stopped with a piece of Al
    foil. They do more damage over a great area of
    the body.
  • Gamma rays penetrate most things and do the most
    damage to DNA.

10
Radiation Protection
  1. Distance
  2. Time
  3. Shielding

11
Nuclear Protective Gear
12
Nuclear Equations-Know your particles and all is
easy
  • Alpha particles -changes the mass number by four
    and the atomic number by two. Its a Helium
    nucleus
  • Beta Particles -changes the atomic number by one.
    No change to the mass number.
  • Neutron -no change to the mass number, but the
    mass changes by one.
  • Alpha Particle
  • Beta Particle
  • Neutron

These are the main ones !!!!!!
13
The other particles
  • Proton
  • Positron

14
Five types of nuclear change
  1. Alpha Decay
  2. Beta Decay
  3. Gamma Decay
  4. Fission (spitting)
  5. Fusion (joining)

15
Nuclear Equations
  • Both sides of the equation must be equal in both
    mass number and atomic number!
  • Its just very easy algebra!

16
Examples
17
Word Problem Example
  • Thorium-225 undergoes alpha decay. Write a
    balanced equation for the reaction.

18
Decay Series
  • A continuous flow of nuclear decay.

19
Fission reaction
  • Nuclear fission is when nucleus is split into two
    smaller nuclei.

20
Fusion
  • Fusion is when two nuclei join to form a larger
    nucleus. The same reaction occurs in the sun!

21
A Fission Reactor
  • Cannot explode like a nuclear bomb. Uses a
    different form of uranium-238
  • There is actually less pollution that goes into
    the air.
  • Nuclear weapons use uranium-235

22
Half-Life
  • Half life is defined as the time it takes for one
    half the mass of the radioactive isotope to
    become stable (non-radioactive)
  • Substances with short half-lives can cause more
    health hazards than isotopes with long half-lives
    (radiation is given off much more slowly.)
  • We are going to view an animation
  • http//library.thinkquest.org/27948/decay.html

23
Half-Life Terms
  • The portion that remains radioactive is called
    the parent
  • The decayed portion is called the daughter.
  • The daughter is not usually radioactive, but it
    can be.

24
Examples
  • Carbon-14 has a half-life of 5700 years. How much
    remains of a 600 gram sample after 17,100
    years?
  • Polonium-210 has a half-life of 138.4 days. How
    much remains of a 1000 gram sample after 98.86
    weeks.

25
Calculating half-life
  • The fraction of the original amount that remains
    is still radioactive.
  • The easy way
  • Determine the number of half-lives
  • Divide the mass by 2 until you have divided as
    many times as you have number of half-lives
  • The Formula

26
Carbon Dating
  • Carbon-14 and Nitrogen-14 are used to date items
    based on the half-life of carbon-14.
  • We know it takes 5730 years to decay carbon-14.
  • The amount present in the atmosphere is constant.
    So you just measure whats in the artifact and
    work backwards.

27
Measuring Radiation-read only
  • RadRadiation Dose
  • Rankinrad/hour
  • REMroentgen equivalent man
  • 1/1000 rem 1 mrem
  • LETLinear energy transfer
  • A rad is the amount of energy that is released in
    tissue when it is irradiated. One rad100 ergs
    (energy uints) deposited in one gram of tissue.

28
REM-read only
  • A REM measures the biological effect of radiation
    on the human body without having to worry about
    the type of radiation involved.
  • Whats allowed? 5-10 rems per year. Its very rare

29
When radiation hits a cell-read only
  • It may pass through the cell w/o damage.
  • It may damage the cell, but the cell fixes the
    damage.
  • It may damage the cell the cell reproduces the
    damaged form.
  • The cell dies-serious problems occur if too many
    cells are killed in a certain organ.

30
Guidelines-read only
  • From WWII Studies
  • 650 rads Death within a few hours
  • 300 rads Lethal-death in 60 days
  • 50-250 rads Radiation sickness
  • Symptoms of radiation sickness
  • Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, hair loss, sore
    throat, reduction in blood platelets, bone marrow
    damage
  • Delayed effects Cancer, leukemia, cataracts,
    sterility, decreased lifespan
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