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Chapter 5: Nuclear Chemistry
Radioactivity Nuclear Equations Radiation Detection Half-Life Medical Applications
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Average Atomic weight of Hydrogen
Isotopes of Hydrogen Isotopes = Atoms of the same element but having different masses. 1 2 1 3 1 H H H + - + - + - Protium 99.99% Tritium Trace % Deuterium 0.01% Average Atomic weight of Hydrogen = amu
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Average Atomic weight of C= 12.011 amu
Isotopes of Carbon C 6 12 C 6 13 C 6 14 - - + - + - + - 98.89% 1.11% Trace % Average Atomic weight of C= amu
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So falls apart (decays) Giving radioactive particles
Radioactive Isotopes 3 1 H C 6 14 - + + - - Hydrogen-3 Carbon-14 Nucleus is unstable So falls apart (decays) Giving radioactive particles
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Radioactive Isotopes in Medicine
123 53 I Diagnose thyroid function 131 53 I Treat hyperthyroid (destroys cells) 60 27 Co Destroy tumors (g radiation) Tc 43 99m Diagnose bone, tissue (most common)
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Alpha Decay He a Particle Po Pb Po Pb He + 4 2 210 84 + 82 206 210 84
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- Beta Decay e C b Particle N n H e -1 14 6 + + - + 7 14 1 1 -1 +
-1 e - 14 6 C b Particle + + - + N 7 14 1 n 1 H -1 e + neutron proton electron
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- Beta Decay e C b Particle N N e C -1 14 6 + + - + 14 7 14 14 -1 6 7
-1 e - 14 6 C b Particle + + - + N 7 14 14 6 C N 7 14 -1 e +
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Gamma Decay 99m 43 Tc g decay + + 99 43 Tc 99m 43 Tc Tc 43 99 g +
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Radiation knocks off an electron
Ionizing Radiation Radiation knocks off an electron - An ion A radical Ions & radicals cause damaging chain reactions
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Radiation knocks off an electron Ions detected by Counter
Geiger Counter Radiation knocks off an electron - An ion Gas in instrument tube Ions detected by Counter
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- Radiation: Penetration through Air a b g 2 - 4 cm 200 - 300 cm 500 m
+ 2 - 4 cm b cm - 500 m g
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- Radiation: Shielding a b g Heavy Cloth Pb, thick concrete
+ Pb, thick concrete Paper Cloth b - g
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Tissue Penetration Depth
+ 0.05 mm 4-5 mm b - >50 cm g
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a: Radon gas in Buildings
Nuclear Equations a: Radon gas in Buildings 226 88 222 4 2 He Ra Rn + 86 218 4 2 He Po + 84 Cancer
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b: Thyroid check & treatment
Nuclear Equations b: Cancer Treatment 60 27 Co 60 -1 e Ni + 28 b: Thyroid check & treatment 131 53 I 131 -1 e Xe + 54
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Radiation Detection Activity Curie (Ci):
# of disintegrations by of 1g Ra Curie (Ci): 1 Ci = 3.7 x 1010disintegrations sec Becquerel (Bq) 1 Bq = 1 disintegration sec
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Radiation Detection Absorbed Dose
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- Radiation Detection: Biological Effect Tissue Penetration Depth a b
+ a - b g Tissue Penetration Depth 0.05 mm mm >50 cm Radiation Absorbed Dose (Rad) (D): 1 rad = 1 x 10-2 J kg tissue 1 rad = 2.4 x 10-3 cal kg tissue
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- Radiation Detection: Biological Effect Tissue Penetration Depth a b
+ 0.05 mm mm b - >50 cm g Radiation Absorbed Dose (Rad) (D): 1 Gray = 1 J kg tissue 100 rad = 1 Gray
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Radiation Detection Biological Damage
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Radiation Equivalent for Man (rem)
(relative biological effectiveness) a RBE 20 1 b g Damage (rem) = absorbed dose (rad) X factor 1 rem = 1 rad x RBE 100 rem = 1 sievert (Sv)
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Learning Check
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Learning Check: Solution
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Annual Radiation Exposure in USA
Total = 170 mrem / yr Cosmic = 40 mrem Air, H2O, Food = 30 mrem X-rays: Chest = 50 mrem Dental = 20 Smoking = 35 mrem TV = 2 mrem Radon = 200 mrem Wood,concrete,bricks = 50 mrem Ground = 15 mrem
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Annual Radiation Exposure in USA
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Biological Effects of Radiation
Dose in rem (at one time) 0-25 genetic damage possible but usually undetected decrease # of white blood cells (temporary) mild radiation sickness (vomit, diarrhea, strong decrease # white blood cells) >300 (diarrhea, hair loss, infection) 500 LD50 for humans
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Biological Effects of Radiation
Dose in rem 300 LD50 for dogs 800 LD50 for rats 50,000 LD50 for Bacterium 100,000 LD50 for Insects 500 LD50 for humans
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Therapeutic Doses of Radiation
Dose in rem 4, Lymphoma 5,000 – 6,000 Skin cancer 6, Lung cancer 6,000 – Brain Tumor
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FDA approved killing of bacteria with:
0.3 – 1 kGy ionizing radiation from Co-60 or Cs-137 (gamma producers)
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Half-Life I t1/2 = Time for 1/2 sample to decay 131 53 5 g 10 g 20 g
8 days 131 53 I 8 days 5 g 10 g 20 g
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Half-Life I days Co yrs Tc-99m 6 hrs
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Half-Life I t1/2 = Time for 1/2 sample to decay 131 53 5 g 10 g 20 g
8 days 131 53 I 8 days 5 g 10 g 20 g Youtube: Bill Nye Explains Half Life (1:04)
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+ Positron Emission Tomography (PET) C e b+ Positron B H n e 11 6 +1 +
+1 e + b+ Positron + + B 5 11 1 H 1 n +1 e + proton neutron positron
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- + Positron Emission Tomography (PET) e C e 2g rays b+ Positron
-1 e electron 11 6 C +1 e - + 2g rays b+ Positron + Detectable g rays image Shows blood flow + B 5 11 11 6 11 5 B +1 e C + positron
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- + Positron Emission Tomography (PET) e C e 2g rays b+ Positron
-1 e electron 11 6 C +1 e - + 2g rays b+ Positron + Detectable g rays image Shows blood flow + B 5 11 +1 e -1 e 2g + positron electron gamma
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Fission Energy Kr U U n Ba Splitting atoms for Energy 91 36 235 92 236
n Energy + unstable 142 56 Ba Uses: Atomic Bomb Nuclear Power
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Fission Need critical mass of U-235 to sustain chain rxn to produce enough E for an explosion
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Fission U-235 Nuclear Power plants: Controlled fission
avoids critical mass
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> E than from fission But impractical since heat too high
Fusion Combining atoms for Energy + 2 1 H 4 2 He 1 n Deuterium Energy + 100,000,000OC + + Tritium 3 1 H + > E than from fission But impractical since heat too high Uses: Sun Hydrogen Bomb
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Radiometric Dating N e C Ar Ca 2 K 14 14 -1 6 7 40 40 40 20 19 18 + +
C-14 dating of artifacts (bones, wood,….); t½ = 5760 years 14 6 C N 7 14 -1 e + Issues: Production of C-14 by sun varies in atmosphere. 14CO2(g) amounts vary in atmosphere U-238 Pb-206 U-235 Pb-207 Issues: Assumes all Pb was once U K Ar (t ½ K-40 = x 109 years) 40 19 K Ar 18 40 40 20 Ca 2 + Issues: Ar(g) solubility Starting amount of K-40
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Learning Check
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Learning Check: Solution
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Videos Video: Frontline NOVA Fukushima: Nuclear Aftershocks (53.41 min)
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Learning Check: Chromium-55 undergoes beta decay wth a half life of 3.5 minutes. What is the primary identity of the sample after decay? 55 24 Cr +
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Learning Check: Solution
Chromium-55 undergoes beta decay wth a half life of 3.5 minutes. What is the primary identity of the sample after decay? 55 24 Cr 55 -1 e Mn + 25
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Learning Check: Chromium-55 undergoes beta decay wth a half life of 3.5 minutes. What is the primary identity of the sample after decay? 55 24 Cr 55 -1 e Mn + 25 If you start with 120 g; How much Cr-55 will be left after 14 minutes?
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Learning Check: Solution
Chromium-55 undergoes beta decay wth a half life of 3.5 minutes. What is the primary identity of the sample after decay? 55 24 Cr 55 -1 e Mn + 25 If you start with 120 g; How much Cr-55 will be left after 14 minutes? 55 24 Cr t1/2 = 3.5 min 3.5 min 3.5 min 3.5 min (7 min Total) (10.5 min Tot) (14 min Total) 15 g 7.5 g 60 g 30 g 120 g
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