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Warm-up What do you know about Radioactivity? Make a list of facts….
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A is for Atom
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Ch. 25.1 Nuclear Radiation
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Most influential research by Marie Curie Nobel Prize in Physics 1903 and again in 1911
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Chemical vs Nuclear Reactions Chemical reactions rearrange electrons Elements stay the same and are recombined Energy released: low to high (dynamite Rx) _______________________________________ Nuclear reactions rearrange p+, n o New elements are formed Radiation is a product Forces: extreme (nuclear explosion, A, H-bombs)
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Radioisotopes All elements until AN 83 (Bi) are stable (few exceptions like C-14 or H-3) And all elements with AN >83 are radioisopes Examples: Uranium, Radium, Plutonium, Neptunium, Thorium, Protactinium ….
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3 Types of Radiation All nuclear radiation can potentially be dangerous to organism ranging from moderate to very damaging Alpha radiation Beta radiationincreasing danger Gamma radiation
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Penetrating Power of Radiation
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Protection from Radiation Alpha: sheet of paper, clothes Beta: wood panel, aluminum foil Gamma: several cm of lead or several m of concrete can partially block gamma rays
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Alpha ( α) Radiation is caused by Alpha-Particle particle written as 4 2 He - α particle it’s a Helium nucleus w/o e- it’s the particle beam Rutherford used in his gold foil experiment
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Alpha Decay
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Writing Alpha Decay Rx 92 272 U _?_ + 4 2 He Law of Conservation of Mass!!! Atomic number of new element is lower by 2!!!
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Practice Show the alpha decay of Neptunium-195
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Beta ( β) Radiation A beta particle is a fast-moving electron Created when a neutron breaks apart neutron → proton + electron (β –particle) Beta particle o -1 e
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Beta Decay
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Writing Beta Decay Rx 92 270 U β _?_ + o -1 e Increases atomic number of new element by 1!!!
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Practice: write beta decay of Neptunium-201
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Gamma Radiation Gamma rays are no particles but electromagnetic radiation like light-, UV- or radiowaves high energy photons Cannot be written in form of a Rx Radioactive decay often produces alpha, beta and gamma radiation simultaneously!!!
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Electromagnetic Spectrum
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25.2 Half-Life of Radioisotopes total # of isotopes in PT: 1500 radioisotopes: 260 Half-Life t 1/2 :time it takes for half of the isotope to decay and form a new element
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Half-Life Curve
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Concentration of old and new elements
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Examples Radioisotope Half-life Bismuth-212 60.5 sec Sodium-24 15 hours Iodine-131 8.07 days Hydrogen-3 12.3 years Cobalt-40 605.26 years Carbon-14 5700 years Uranium-238 4.5 billion years
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Practice Sodium-24 beta decays. What new isotope is formed when it decays? How much new isotope is formed after 45 hours? How much old isotope is left after 45 hours? How much C-14 is left after 11,400 years? How much old isotope is left after 5 half lives?
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Warm-up Create a Venn Diagram that contrasts regular isotopes and radioisotopes
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Journal 1.How much old isotope is present after 5 half lives in % and in fraction 2.How much new isotope is present? 3.Which isotopes from your list would you choose for fossils that are 500 years 5000 years 1 billion years
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Ch. 25.3 Radiation in Your Life
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Nuclear Fission Fission = splitting (of a nucleus) creates a chain reaction of high speed neutrons that split more nuclei generates enormous amounts of energy
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2 Types of Fission uncontrolled nuclear reaction – A Bomb controlled nuclear reaction – nuclear power plant
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Controlled Nuclear Fission Speed of the neutrons is lowered by graphite rods The coolant is heated that power steam turbines to generate electricity
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Nuclear Reactor
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How does a Nuclear PP works NPP san onofre
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+/- of Nuclear Energy -Forever storage of nuclear waste -Accidents that can lead to widespread contaminations (Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, Fukoshima) + no pollution, greenhouse gas emission (CO2) + independence from oil (political costs…) + long term, large scale, reliable energy production
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Nuclear Fusion Fusion: combining (two small nuclei) more energy than nuclear fission Also creates a chain reaction Sun does nuclear fusion
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Nuclear Fusion life nf
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Forces Within the Nucleus Electromagnetic repulsion: Protons repelling each other Nuclear forces: neutrons and nuclear binding energy glue protons together “cosmic glue” Nuclear forces > electromagnetic repulsion, element is stable Nuclear forces < electromagnetic repulsion, radioisotope
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25.4 Radiation in your life
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Ionizing Radiation Radiation with enough energy to knock electrons of the exposed elements and change them Formation of ions – charged atoms (#p+ and e- is not equal!!!) Particle radiation: alpha and beta particles Electromagnetic waves: UV, X-rays, gamma rays
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Electromagnetic Spectrum
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DNA Damage from Radiation
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Dose vs Damage - radiation doses are measured in Sieverts
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radiation cellphones and tumors
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Nuclear Medicine Radiation treatment of cancer. Radiation affects quickly dividing cells more than non- dividing cells (normal) Injection of Iodine-131 for the detection of thyroid function
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Research Radiolabeling of molecules, cell parts with radioisotopes H-3, S-35…
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Fossil dating When the animal is alive it incorporates radioactive trace elements from environment Example: C-14 alongside C-13, C-12 T 1/2 = 5700 years When animal dies/fossilizes C-14 is not replaced but undergoes transmutation to N-14. What type of transmutation turns C-14 into N- 14? The older the fossil the more C-14 is gone
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