Unit 11 - Nuclear Chemistry

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
20th Century Discoveries
Advertisements

Nuclear Physics Spring 2013.
Nuclear Chemistry.
Nuclear Chemistry. Two main forces in nucleus  Strong nuclear force—all nuclear particles attract each other  Electric forces—protons repulse each other.
Nuclear Chemistry.
What is it to be Radioactive? Radioactive decay is the process in which an unstable atomic nucleus loses energy by emitting radiation in the form of particles.
Unit 12 – Nuclear Chemistry. Part II Key Terms Alpha decay – spontaneous decay of a nucleus that emits a helium nucleus and energy Beta decay – spontaneous.
Nuclear Chemistry. ATOMIC REVIEW: Atomic number = # of protons # of neutrons = mass # - atomic # protons & neutrons are in the nucleus.
NUCLEAR CHEMISTRY. Atomic Structure Recall: Atoms – consist of a positively charged nucleus, which has protons and neutrons. IsotopeSymbol# protons# neutronsAtomic.
Chapter 10 Nuclear Decay. Objectives 〉 What happens when an element undergoes radioactive decay? 〉 How does radiation affect the nucleus of an unstable.
Nuclear Chemistry Nuclear chemistry is the study of the structure of atomic nuclei and the changes they undergo. Ch 25 CVHS.
Intro to Nuclear Chemistry. The Nucleus Remember that the nucleus is comprised of the two nucleons, protons and neutrons. The number of protons is the.
A radioactive isotope is an atom that has a nucleus that is not stable (will change to form a nucleus of a different element). The process by which the.
 Nuclear reactions deal with the nucleus  Chemical reactions deal with electrons  What is the difference!?!?! ◦ Nuclear reactions involve unstable.
Nuclear Chemistry. Radioactivity  Radioisotopes – isotopes that are unstable, who’s nucleus undergoes changes to gain stability  Radiation – the penetration.
Nuclear Chemistry EQ: How does Nuclear chemistry affect the structure of atomic nuclei? Ch 25 CVHS.
NUCLEAR CHEMISTRY.
Nuclear Chemistry.
Nuclear Reactions.
Nuclear Chemistry (Topic for Regents exam, SAT II exam and AP exam)
Nuclear Chemistry and Radioactive Decay
Nuclear Physics.
Section 1: What is Radioactivity?
The Nuclear Atom In 1932, James Chadwick discovered a nuclear particle that was not affected by a charge. The nucleus contains PROTONS and.
Ch. 21 Nuclear Chemistry.
Nuclear Physics.
Chapter 5: Star POWer.
E = mc2 If you can’t explain it simply, you haven’t learned it well enough. Einstein.
Nuclear Chemistry Physical Science.
Unit 11 - Nuclear Chemistry
Nucleons Protons: +1 each, determines identity of element, mass of 1 amu, determined using atomic number, nuclear charge Neutrons: no charge, determines.
Nuclear Binding, Radioactivity
Nuclear Chemistry.
Chapter 13 Nuclear Chemistry.
Unit 13 Nuclear Chemistry.
Chapter 10 Radioactivity and Nuclear reactions
Nuclear Chemistry Bravo – 15,000 kilotons.
Nuclear Decay Song on Youtube
Nuclear Chemistry.
Nuclear Chemistry.
Harnessing the Power of the Sun
Nuclear Chemistry Chapter 25.
Radioactivity If a nucleus is radioactive it is unstable and will decay (breakdown), which causes the nucleus to change and release energy as radiation.
Nuclear.
NUCLEAR CHEMISTRY NUCLEONS – The particles found in the nucleus
Nuclear Chemistry.
NUCLEAR CHEMISTRY nuclear chemistry/physics: processes that occur in
Nuclear Chemistry.
Harnessing the Power of the Sun
CHAPTER 22 Nuclear Chemistry
Nuclear Chemistry.
Atom’s Story Day 8 Nuclear.
Chemistry 2 Honors Northwestern High School J. Venables
Bell Work: Radioactivity
Nuclear Chemistry: Radioactivity & Types of Radiation
Chapter 4, section 4 Chapter 24
Nuclear Chemistry Chapter 21.
Nuclear Chemistry.
Nuclear Chemistry.
Nuclear Chemistry.
Fundamental Forces of the Universe
Part 5: Radioactive Decay
Nuclear Radiation.
Atom’s Story Day 8 Nuclear.
Unit 14: Nuclear Chemistry
Section 1: What is Radioactivity?
Chapter 21 Section 1 – The Nucleus Nuclear Chemistry.
Nuclear Energy Nuclear Structure and Radioactivity.
Presentation transcript:

Unit 11 - Nuclear Chemistry -What is the difference between fission and fusion? -What does half-life measure? -What are the different ways that a nucleus decays? Considering all of the possible uses of nuclear technology, can we safely utilize this source of energy? Why/why not?

Nuclear radioactivity Natural radioactivity ______________________ - emission of particles or energy from an unstable nucleus Discovered by Henri Bequerel Three types of radioactive decay ____________ decay (He-nucleus) ____________ decay (high energy electron) ____________ decay (high energy electromagnetic waves)

The nature of the nucleus ________________________ Binds protons and neutrons Very short ranged, less than 10-15 m Overcomes proton-proton Coulomb repulsion Band of stability

Generalizations - nuclear stability Atomic number > 83: unstable Nucleon number = 2, 8, 20, 28, 50, 82 or 126: added stability Pairs of protons and pairs of neutrons: added stability Odd number of both protons and neutrons less stable Neutron: proton ratios for added stability 1:1 in isotopes with up to 20 protons 1+increasing:1 with increasingly heavy isotopes

Nuclear equations ____________________= number of protons in nucleus _______________: same atomic number; different number of neutrons ___________________= number of nucleons (protons and neutrons) in nucleus ______________________ Represented by balanced equations Charge conserved Atomic number conserved

Types of radioactive decay Alpha emission Expulsion of helium nucleus Least penetrating: stopped by ______________ Beta emission Expulsion of an electron More penetrating: 1 cm of _______________ Gamma decay Emission of a high energy photon Most penetrating: 5 cm of _____________

Radioactive decay series One radioactive nucleus decays to a 2nd, which decays to a 3rd, which… Three naturally occurring series Thorium-232 to lead-208 Uranium-235 to lead-207 Uranium-238 to lead-206 Process results in a stable nucleus

Writing Nuclear Equations Determine what type of decay occurs Write what you start with on the left side of the arrow Write the decay particle emitted on the far right Using conservation of mass and atomic #, determine what the new nucleus will be

Things to remember: Alpha decay gives off a ____________________ Remaining nucleus has a mass 4 lower and atomic # 2 lower than original Beta decay gives off a _________________ Remaining nucleus has the same mass and an atomic # 1 higher than original

Practice Thorium-232 undergoes Alpha decay Radium 228 undergoes Beta decay

Radioactive Decay Rates It is impossible to predict the exact moment a nucleus will decay We CAN predict the time for ________________________________________to decay

Half-life Time required for 1/2 of a radioactive sample to decay Example: 1 kg of an unstable isotope with a one-day half- life After 1 day: 500 g remain After 2 days: 250 g remain After 3 days: 125 g remain U-238 decay series: wide half- life variation

Calculating Half Lives Radium-226 has a half life of 1599 years. How long would it take seven- eighths of a radium-226 sample to decay? Step 1- List the given and unknown values Step 2- Calculate the fraction of radioactive sample remaining Step 3- Calculate the number of half lives Step 4- Calculate the total time required for the radioactive decay

Nuclear energy There is an overall loss of mass in nuclear reactions Why? ______________________ of mass and energy Change in mass is related to a change in energy ______________________ Difference between masses of reactants and products

Nuclear Energy _________________ energy Energy out? Energy required to break a nucleus into individual protons and neutrons Energy out? E=mc2 E= energy in J M= mass defect in kg C= speed of light 3.0e8

Nuclear fission Heavy nuclei splitting into lighter ones ___________________ Possible when one reaction can lead to others One neutron in, two or more out ____________________ Sufficient mass and concentration to produce a chain reaction

Nuclear power plants Rely on controlled fission chain reactions Steel vessel contains fuel rods and control rods Full plant very intricate Containment and auxiliary buildings necessary Spent fuel rods Contain fissionable materials U-235, Pu-239 Disposal issues not settled

Many possible fission fragments

Nuclear fusion Less massive nuclei forming more massive nuclei Energy source for Sun and other stars Requirements for fusion ___________________________ __________________________ Sufficient confinement __________

Source of nuclear energy Ultimately connected to origins of the Universe and the life cycles of stars Big Bang theory Incredibly hot, dense primordial plasma cools, creating protons and neutrons Continued cooling leads to hydrogen atoms which collapse gravitationally into 1st generation stars Stellar evolution Interior temperatures and densities suitable for fusion of heavy elements beyond hydrogen and helium Certain massive stars explode in supernovae, spreading heavy elements (some radioactive) Ultimate source: gravitational attraction!