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Nuclear Chemistry Unit 15
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I. Nuclear Reactions A. Involve a change in the nucleus of the atom 1. made of protons and neutrons (called nucleons together) 2. atoms referred to as nuclides, identified by number of protons and neutrons carbon – 14 or nuclear symbol carbon – 14 or nuclear symbol (on board)
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B. Stability 1. For low atomic numbers the ratio of protons:neutrons should be 1:1, for high atomic numbers, the ratio should be 1:1.5 (neutrons help hold it together) 2. Even number of nucleons usually stable. 3. Others unstable - can undergo transmutations - change in nucleus identity because protons change (converts one element to another)
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C. Radiation produced in nuclear change Capture: taken in, Emission/decay: given off) 1. alpha particle – helium nucleus, α, 4 2 He 2. beta particle – electron, β (on right), 0 –1 e 3. positron – like electron but positive, 0 +1 e 4. electron capture (K capture) – electron, on left, 0 –1 e on left, 0 –1 e 5. neutron - 1 0 n 6. gamma rays – energy, 0 0
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D. Writing and Balancing Nuclear Equations Mass must be equal on both sides Therefore, the top numbers must be add to the same number on both sides Charge must be equal on both sides Therefore, the bottom numbers must add to the same number on both sides Find the missing numbers Identify the particle or element (look on the periodic table for the bottom number)
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Nuclear Equations Examples: Q. Write the nuclear equation for C-14( ) C 14 6 e 0 N 14 7 + Po 209 84 He 4 2 Pb 205 82 + ) Q. Write the nuclear equation for 209 Po( ) Q. Complete this fission reaction: Kr 94 36 U 235 92 n 1 0 Ba 139 56 + n 1 0 + 3 +
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Half-Life Half-life is the time is takes a sample to decay to half its original amount. Half-Life Demonstration from GCSE Examples: (on board) 1.What fraction will remain after 15 days if the half life is 36 hours? 2.How many g of a 100 g sample will remain after 4 half-lives?
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Radioactive Dating N-14 converts to C-14 in the upper atmosphere. There has been a constant rate of production in the past 75 years. C-14 is part of the CO 2 ingested by plants and animals. When something dies, it stops ingesting and the C-14 starts to decay. The half-life is 5715 years. Organic materials can be dated back to 50,000 years. Carbon dating agrees with tree ring data within 10%. Minerals and rocks can be dated back to as many as 4 billion years.
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Other Applications 2. Radioactive tracers: help doctors follow the transport of materials through the body. Help diagnose cancer and other diseases. 3. Agriculture: determine how much fertilizer is absorbed by plants, increase shelf-life of food (irradiation kills bacteria and insects) 4. Cancer treatment
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III. Biological Effects of Radiation A. Everyone is subject to background radiation. About.1 rem per year. Other sources include cosmic rays, medical/dental x-rays/other tests. B. Damage to nucleic acids (DNA/RNA) is worst type. C. Radiation affects cells that are undergoing cell division the most. Most at risk: 1. Children (especially developing fetuses) 2. Cancer cells (cancer is just uncontrolled cell division)
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D. Penetrating abilities 1. Alpha: least penetrating - only travels a few cm, stopped by paper or skin, most damaging - can cause damage if ingested or inhaled 2. Beta: medium penetration and damage - travel close to speed of light, 100 times more penetrating than alpha, stopped by thin sheet of metal (like aluminum) 3. Gamma: most penetrating, least damaging - stopped by thick sheet of lead &/or concrete
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Damage can be affected by: Time – how long you are exposed Shielding – radiation absorbing material material Distance – how far away from source Amount of radiation (usually can’t control this, except with medical imaging like x-rays)
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Nuclear Fission Chemical reactions involve outer electrons Nuclear reactions involve changes in nuclei Nuclear Fission – breaking apart of heavy nuclei into two parts A.Some happens spontaneously - radioactive decay series like uranium-235 B.Others need bombardment by neutrons 1.Can start a chain reaction - produces neutrons which can also start reactions 2.Must reach critical mass before it can be sustained a.uncontrolled - explosion b.controlled - nuclear reactor to create energy or radioactive nuclides for medical or agricultural use
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Nuclear Reactor
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Nuclear Reactors (Fission only) All are fission reactors - fusion reactors require more energy than they give back (future??) Shielding: radiation-absorbing material Fuel rods contain enriched uranium pellets Control Rods (boron, cadmium, gadolinium) – absorbs neutrons to slow or shut down reaction (alternate with fuel rods ) Moderators – slow down neutrons to sustain reaction Coolant – water is most common, energy gained can power generator can power generator Small amount of waste produced Compare nuclear vs. coal power plants
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Nuclear Fusion Joining of two light nuclei into a heavier, more stable nucleus A. Powers the sun and stars - hydrogen joins to form helium B. Hydrogen Bomb 1. Uncontrolled fusion 2. Fission gives heat and pressure to cause fusion to happen
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Fusion Reactors (Don’t exist yet) FUTURE?? – none now 1. Advantages: a. fuel is cheap and available (use seawater) b. little or no radioactive waste 2. Major Problem: very high activation energy (high temps needed for sustained output) not energy efficient yet
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