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Nuclear Chemistry

Learn about the units used in measuring radiation, the concept of half-life, carbon-14 dating, transuranium elements, nuclear fusion and fission, nuclear power, and the applications of nuclear medicine.

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Nuclear Chemistry

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  1. Nuclear Chemistry

  2. Units for Measuring Radiation Curie: 1 Ci = 3.7 x 1010 distintegrations/s SI unit is the becquerel: 1 Bq = 1 dps Rad: measures amount of energy absorbed 1 rad = 0.01 J absorbed/kg tissue Rem: based on rad and type of radiation. Quantifies biological tissue damage Usually use “millirem”

  3. Chronic Radiation Exposure

  4. Effects of Acute Radiation

  5. Half-LifeSection 15.4 & Screen 15.8 • HALF-LIFE is the time it takes for 1/2 a sample is disappear. • The rate of a nuclear transformation depends only on the “reactant” concentration. • Concept of HALF-LIFE is especially useful for 1st order reactions.

  6. Half-Life Decay of 20.0 mg of 15O. What remains after 3 half-lives? After 5 half-lives?

  7. Kinetics of Radioactive Decay Activity (A) = Disintegrations/time = (k)(N) where N is the number of atoms Decay is first order, and so ln (A/Ao) = -kt The half-life of radioactive decay is t1/2 = 0.693/k

  8. Carbon-14 Dating

  9. Radiocarbon Dating Radioactive C-14 is formed in the upper atmosphere by nuclear reactions initiated by neutrons in cosmic radiation 14N + 1on ---> 14C + 1H The C-14 is oxidized to CO2, which circulates through the biosphere. When a plant dies, the C-14 is not replenished. But the C-14 continues to decay with t1/2 = 5730 years. Activity of a sample can be used to date the sample.

  10. Transuranium Elements & Glenn Seaborg 106Sg

  11. Transuranium Elements Elements beyond 92 (transuranium) made starting with an n,g reaction 23892U + 10n ---> 23992U + g 23992U ---> 23993Np + 0-1b 23993Np ---> 23994Pu + 0-1b

  12. FUSION and FISSION: Nuclear Weapons

  13. Nuclear Reactions • Natural decay • Alpha • Beta • Fusion (together) • Fission (break apart)

  14. Nuclear Fusion The process in which small nuclei combine at extremely high temperatures, forming larger nuclei and releasing energy.

  15. Fusion: Adv / Disad. • Great weapon because releases large amounts of energy • Can make new elements with atomic numbers greater than 92 • NOT used for Nuclear energy because not able to control reaction (Energy in greater than energy out)

  16. Nuclear Fission

  17. Nuclear Fission & Lise Meitner 109Mt

  18. Nuclear Bomb: Fission • Nuclear Chain Reaction • Critical Mass

  19. Initiation. Reaction of a single atom starts the chain • (e.g., 235U + neutron) • 2. Propagation. 236U fission releases neutrons that initiate other fissions • 3. Termination.

  20. Fission: Adv / Disad. • Great weapon because releases large amounts of energy • Used for Nuclear energy because CAN control reaction • Dis: Nuclear waste and radiation generated

  21. Nuclear Fission & POWER • Currently about 103 nuclear power plants in the U.S. and about 435 worldwide. • 17% of the world’s energy comes from nuclear.

  22. Nuclear Power: Advantages • More power for less amount of fuel • Non-air polluting

  23. Nuclear Power: disadvantages • Radioactive waste. • Waste disposal • Possibility of melt-down • 30 year operational life.

  24. Nuclear Medicine: Imaging Radioactive isotopes are used to diagnosis and treat diseases Thyroid imaging using Tc-99m IF RADIATION IS BAD FOR YOU WHY INTENTIONALLY EXPOSE YOURSELF?

  25. Nuclear Medicine: Imaging Technetium-99m is used in more than 85% of the diagnostic scans done in hospitals each year. Synthesized on-site from Mo-99. 9942Mo ---> 99m43Tc + 0-1b 99m43Tc decays to 9943Tc giving off g ray. Tc-99m contributes in sites of high activity.

  26. Nuclear Medicine: Imaging

  27. Nuclear Radiation: Beneficial • Can be used to treat cancer • Can be used as tracers in agriculture, medicine, and scientific research.

  28. Food Irradiation • Gamma radiation from Cobalt-60

  29. Smoke Detectors

  30. Medical Imaging

  31. PET SCANNER

  32. PET SCAN IMAGES

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