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Nuclear Reactions
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Balancing Nuclear Equations
Conservation of Atomic Number (subscript) Conservation of Atomic Mass (superscript)
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Balancing Nuclear Equations
16N 0e O -1 7 8 Conservation of mass number: 16 = Conservation of atomic number: 7 =
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Natural Transmutation
1 term on the reactant side Original isotope 2 terms on the product side Emitted Particle New Isotope Happens all by itself. Not affected by anything in the environment.
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Natural Transmutation
16N 0e O 7 -1 8 1 term on reactant side 2 terms on product side
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Artificial Transmutation
We cause it to happen by smashing particles into one another. 2 terms on the reactant side. Original Isotope or Target Particle that hit it or bullet: neutron, proton, or -particle Product side usually has 2 terms.
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Artificial Transmutation
27Al + 4He 30P + 1n 13 2 15 Original isotope or target nucleus “Bullet”
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Bombarding with Protons,
Protons and -particles have positive charge and mass. They can do some damage when they hit the target nucleus. Protons and -particles have to be accelerated to high speeds to overcome repulsive forces. (The nucleus they are aiming for is also positive.) Use magnetic and electric fields to accelerate them.
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What is an accelerator? An accelerator consists of a vacuum chamber, usually a long pipe, surrounded by vacuum pumps, magnets, radio-frequency cavities, high voltage instruments and electronic circuits. Inside the pipe, particles are accelerated to very high speeds & smashed into each other.
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FermiLab 4 miles in circumference!
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CERN 27 kilometer ring. Particles travel at just below the speed of light. In 10 hrs, the particles make 400 million revolutions of the ring.
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SLAC LBL
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Neutron Capture Neutrons don’t have to be accelerated. They’re neutral so they aren’t repelled by a positive nucleus. Don’t need high K.E. to overcome repulsive forces. So don’t need accelerators. It’s a good thing – we can’t accelerate neutrons.
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Artificial Transmutation
27Al + 4He 30P + 1n All of these equations have 2 reactants! 13 2 15 14N + 4He 17O + 1H 1 2 8 7 75As + 4He 78Br + 1n 2 35 33 37Cl + 1n 38Cl 17 17
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2 more kinds of nuclear equations
Fission Fusion Both have 2 reactants Equations have distinctive features, so easy to tell them from artificial transmutation
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Fission Reaction Involves splitting a heavy nucleus into 2 lighter nuclei.
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Fission Involves splitting a heavy nucleus into 2 lighter nuclei.
Reactant side has 2 terms: 1 heavy isotope, U-235 or Pu-239 Bombarding particle – usually a neutron Product side has at least 2 terms: 2 medium-weight isotopes 1 or more neutrons Huge amount of energy is released. Fission = Division
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Fission 235U + 1n 91Kr + 142Ba + 31n + energy 56 92 36
92 36 235U + 1n 72Zn + 160Sm + 41n + energy 62 92 30 More than 200 different product isotopes from the fission of U-235 have been identified. A small amount of mass is converted to energy by E = mc2.
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Fission Chain Reaction
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Fission Chain Reaction
Requires a critical mass of fissionable isotope. Controlled – nuclear reactor. Uncontrolled – bomb. Animation of nuclear reactor
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Fusion Reactant side has 2 small nuclei – H + H or H + He or He + He.
Product side has 1 (still pretty small nucleus) and maybe a particle. Source of sun’s energy. 2 nuclei unite. 2H + 3H 4He + 1n + energy 1 1 2
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Inertial Confinement - Fusion
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Magnetic Confinement - fusion
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