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UNIT 1: RADIOACTIVITY AND NUCLEAR PHYSICS
24

Traditional atomic model Not correct but it is a good enough approximation. Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons. Orbiting.

Dec 27, 2015

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Page 1: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.

UNIT 1: RADIOACTIVITY AND NUCLEAR PHYSICS

Page 2: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.

Traditional atomic model Not correct but it is a good enough

approximation. Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons:

Protons and Neutrons. Orbiting electrons. Atomic number is number of protons. Mass number is number of nucleons. Elements have the same atomic

number but can have different mass numbers = isotopes.

Page 3: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.

Chemical symbols for isotopes

Page 4: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.

Properties of subatomic particles

Property

Proton Neutron Electron

Mass 1.673 x 10-27 kg

1.675 x 10-27 kg

9.109 x 10-31 kg

Charge +1 0 -1

Location Nucleus Nucleus Orbiting

Page 5: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.
Page 6: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.
Page 7: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.
Page 8: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.

Hydrogen Isotopes

Page 9: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.
Page 10: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.
Page 11: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.
Page 12: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.
Page 13: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.

Radioactive isotopes

Every element has some unstable isotopes called radioisotopes.

These are rare. The most common isotope is usually stable (eg. C-12 not C-13 or C-14).

Radioisotopes become stable by decaying into a stable isotope.

They decay by emitting radiation.

Page 14: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.

Alpha decay The nucleus ejects an α particle (2

protons and 2 neutrons) to become smaller and more stable.

Page 15: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.

Uranium-238: 92 protons, 146 neutrons.

Emits an α particle: 2 protons, 2 neutrons.

Thorium-234: 90 protons, 144 neutrons.

Th-234 is the daughter nucleus of the alpha decay

Page 16: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.

Beta decay

A neutron can decay into a proton and an electron (after about 10 minutes).

The electron (β particle) is ejected from the nucleus at close to the speed of light.

The atomic number increases by 1. The mass number stays the same.

Page 17: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.

Thorium-234: 90 protons, 144 neutrons

One neutron decays into a proton and an electron

Protactinium-234: 91 protons, 143 neutrons

Page 18: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.

Gamma decay

After an alpha or beta decay the nucleus can be momentarily “excited”.

The excited nucleus emits a high energy gamma ray (which is a photon).

If a nucleus is in an excited state we put an asterisk next to the symbol.

Page 19: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.

Protactinium-234*: 91 protons, 143 neutrons

Emits a γ particle Protactinium-234: 91 protons, 143

neutrons

Page 20: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.

Decay of Uranium-238

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uranium-238

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decay_chain

Page 22: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.

Smoke detectors Americium-241 emits α particles. These charged particles allow a

current to flow between two electrodes. If smoke blocks the α particles then the current is reduced and an alarm sounds.

Page 23: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.

Ionising power Radiation can ionise atoms by removing one or

more electron from it’s orbit. α particles interact strongly with atoms because

of their slow speed and +2 charge. This slows them down quickly (low penetration power).

β particles also with atoms but are moving faster and only interact with the outside electrons. They take longer to slow down and have higher penetration power than α particles.

γ particles interact with atoms very weakly because they have no charge and most of an atom is empty space. This means they pass through most materials.

Page 24: Traditional atomic model  Not correct but it is a good enough approximation.  Nucleus contains 2 types of nucleons: Protons and Neutrons.  Orbiting.

Properties of α,β,γ particlesProperty α

particleβ particle

γ particle

Mass 6.644 x 10-27 kg

9.109 x 10-31 kg

0 kg

Charge +2 -1 0

Effect of electric or magnetic field

Small deflection Large deflection No deflection

Speed (c%) 5-7% 30-99% 100%

Penetration power

A few cm in airA Piece of paper

1-2m of airA few cm of Al

Goes through airMany cm of lead absorbs most

Ionising power Strong Weak Very weak