teacher notes: ch 17 nuclear chemistry

70
1 Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

Upload: others

Post on 28-Apr-2022

8 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

1

Teacher Notes: Ch 17

Nuclear Chemistry

Page 2: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

2

Ch 17.1-17.2

Topic:Radioactivity

EQ: How was

radioactivity discovered

and what is it?

Page 3: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

3 Ch 17.1 • Some isotope’s are not stable.

• The emitted subatomic particles are

called nuclear radiation.

• The isotopes that emit them are termed

radioactive.

• Nuclear radiation can be harmful -

damage biological molecules.

• But not all Radioactive isotopes are

harmful.

Page 4: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

4

• In 1895 William Roentgen discovered X-

rays, a form of radiation.

Ch 17.2: The Discovery of Radioactivity

Page 5: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

5

• In 1896, French scientist Antoine-Henri Becquerel (1852–1908), discovered radioactivity.

• He studied Uranium minerals that emit light after being exposed to sunlight, a phenomenon called phosphorescence.

Ch 17.2: The Discovery of Radioactivity

Page 6: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

6

• Marie Curie (1867–1934), one of

the first women in France to

attempt doctoral work by studying

uranic rays for her doctoral thesis.

• Her first task was to determine

whether any other substances

besides uranium emitted rays.

• In 1898, Marie Curie and her

husband Pierre (1859–1906) took

Becquerel’s mineral sample (called

pitchblende) and isolated the

components emitting the rays.

Ch 17.2 The Discovery of Radioactivity

Page 7: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

7 The Discovery of Radioactivity:

Marie Curie

• In 1903, Curie received the Nobel Prize

in physics for the discovery of

radioactivity.

• Curie discovered two new elements.

Curie named one of her newly discovered

elements polonium after her home

country of Poland.

Page 8: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

8 • Curie named the 2nd element

Radium because of the very

high amount of radioactivity

that it produced.

• Radium was so radioactive that

it glowed in the dark and

emitted significant amounts of

heat.

• In the past, radium was added

to some paints (watch dials that

made the dial glow)

Page 9: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

9 The Discovery of Radioactivity

• In 1911, Curie was awarded a second

Nobel Prize, this time in chemistry, for

her discovery of the two new elements

polonium and radium.

• She is the first woman to win the

Nobel Prize and is the only person to

receive Nobel Prizes in two different

sciences – physics and chemistry!!!

• Element 96 (curium) is named in

honor and her contributions to our

understanding of radioactivity.

Page 10: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

10 An Unstable System

• The rays and particles emitted by a

radioactive source are called radiation.

• REMEMBER…..Isotopes are atoms of the

same element that have different numbers

of neutrons and mass number.

• Isotopes of atoms with unstable nucleus

are called radioisotopes.

Page 11: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

11

1. Marie Curie discovered that chemical

Reactions were affected by Pressure and

Temperature, whereas nuclear reactions were not

affected by P and T.

2. Chemical Reactions involve electrons, not

protons and neutrons.

3. Nuclear reactions involve the nucleus;

changes protons & neutrons .

– THIS CHANGES THE IDENTITY OF

ELEMENT!!!!

Nuclear Reactions vs. Chemical Reactions

(3 differences - Muy Importante!!!)

Page 12: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

12

Ch 17.3-17.4

Topic: Types of

Radiations

EQ: What are the different

types of radioactive

decay?

Page 13: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

13 Ch 17.3:

Main Types of Radiation

• Five Types:

–Alpha (α)

–Beta (β)

–Gamma (γ)

–Positron

–Electron Capture

Page 14: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

14 Radioactivity

Radioactivity is

the emission of

tiny, energetic

particles by the

nuclei of certain

unstable atoms.

Nuclei are

unstable when

they are too large

or contain an

unbalanced ratio of

neutrons to

protons.

Draw with notes

Page 15: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

15 Isotope Notation

Any isotope can be represented with the following

notation:

The main subatomic particles—protons, neutrons,

and electrons—can be represented with similar

notation.

•FYI - Proton – usually

referred to as hydrogen H1

1

Page 16: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

16

Types of Radiation

He4

2

• Alpha (ά) – a positively

charged helium isotope

•Beta (β) – an electron

•Gamma ray (γ) – pure

energy 00

0

−1 e 0

−1 or

Page 17: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

17 Other Nuclear Particles

• Positron – a positive electron

•Electron capture

0

+1 e 0

+1 or

e 0

−1

Page 18: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

18 Nuclear Equations

• A nuclear equation represents the changes that occur

during radioactivity.

• Example:

• The term nuclide is used in nuclear chemistry to

mean a specific isotope.

• The original atom is called the parent nuclide, and

the products are called the daughter nuclides.

Page 19: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

19 Nuclear Equations Must Be Balanced

• Check your work…..

The sum of the atomic numbers on both sides of

a nuclear equation must be equal, and the sum of

the mass numbers on both sides must also be

equal.

Page 20: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

20

• Penetrating power is the ability to penetrate matter.

In order for radiation to damage important molecules

within living cells, it must penetrate the cell.

Penetrating Power

Page 21: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

21 Alpha Radiation

Alpha (α) Radiation occurs when an unstable

nucleus emits an α particle composed of 2 protons

and 2 neutrons.

Page 22: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

22

Alpha Radiation (α)

• helium nucleus

• charge is 2+

charge

Mass #

4 4 +2 4

2 2 2 He He

Page 23: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

23

• Alpha radiation: most massive of all particles.

– Has the lowest penetrating power

• Alpha radiation - can be stopped by a sheet

of paper, by clothing, or even by air.

Page 24: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

24

Alpha Decay

+ +

+ +

+ +

210

84 Po

+ +

Particle

210

84 Po +

LEFT side

Page 25: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

25 Writing Nuclear Equations

• Alpha Decay of Th – 232….

LEFT side

Page 26: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

26

Alpha Decay

U 238

92 He

4

2 +

Types of Radioactive Decay LEFT side

Page 27: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

27

Alpha Decay

Pu 239

94 +

Types of Radioactive Decay

U 234

92 +

LEFT side

Page 28: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

28

Beta radiation occurs when an unstable nucleus

emits an electron.

Page 29: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

29

Beta Radiation

• A Beta particle is a very-fast moving electron

Charge

Mass #

0

−1

Page 30: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

30

• Beta radiation:

– much less massive than alpha particles

– have greater penetrating power

– a sheet of metal (like foil) or a thick piece of

wood is required to stop them.

Page 31: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

31

Beta Decay

14

6 C

-

Particle

+ +

+ +

+ + + +

+ +

+ + +

+ -

+ 14

6 C

LEFT side

Page 32: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

32

I 131

53 + e

0

−1

Beta Decay

Types of Radioactive Decay LEFT side

Page 33: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

33

Beta Decay

He 6

2 +

Na 25

11 +

LEFT side

Page 34: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

34 Gamma (γ) Radiation

• Different from alpha or beta radiation.

• Gamma radiation is not matter but

electromagnetic radiation.

• Gamma rays are high-energy (short-

wavelength) photons (bundles of light).

• A gamma ray has no charge and no mass.

Page 35: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

35 Gamma (γ) Ray Radiation Damage Potential

• Gamma rays:

– Highest penetrating power.

– Stopping gamma rays requires several

inches of lead shielding or thick slabs of

concrete.

Page 36: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

36

Radiation Draw LEFT side

Page 37: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

37

Penetrating Ability

Page 38: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

38

Positron emission occurs when an unstable

nucleus emits a positron (positive electron).

Page 39: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

39

• The symbol for a positron is:

• Positron - same mass as an electron but

opposite charge.

• Positron emission is similar to beta emission in

its penetrating power.

Page 40: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

40

C

11

6 + e

0

1

Positron Emission

Types of Radioactive Decay LEFT side

Page 41: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

41

• Electron capture occurs when the nucleus of an atom draws in a surrounding electron.

• Written on left side of rxn!!

Positron emission and electron capture

e0

1

Page 42: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

42 Table 17.1 Selected Types of Radioactive Decay

Draw LEFT side – Great Summary of radiations

Page 43: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

43

Balancing a Nuclear Equation

• Write a balanced nuclear equation for the alpha decay of gold-230.

LEFT side

Page 44: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

44

Question 2

What element is formed when silver - 110

radioisotope undergoes alpha decay?

LEFT side

Page 45: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

45

Question 3

What element is formed when undergoes

a. beta decay?

b.Positron decay?

LEFT side

Page 46: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

46

Question 4

What element is formed when undergoes

a. neutron decay?

b.electron capture decay?

LEFT side

Page 47: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

47

Checking for Understanding

238 234 234 234 230U Th Pa U Th ?

LEFT side

Page 48: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

48

Ch 17.5

Topic: Detecting

Radiations and Half life

EQ: How is radiation

detected?

Page 49: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

49 Detecting Radioactivity

• Film-badge dosimeters consist

of photographic film held in a

small case that is pinned to

clothing.

• The badges are collected and

processed as a way to monitor

exposure to radiation.

• The more exposed the film has

become, the more radioactivity

to which the person has been

exposed.

Page 50: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

50 Geiger-Müller Counter

• Energetic particles emitted by

radioactive nuclei pass through a

chamber filled with argon gas and

ionize (create ions) it.

• Creating a tiny electrical current

between the + and - charges.

• This electrical signal can be

detected on a meter.

• The “Clicking” is the sound most

people associate with a radiation

detector.

Page 51: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

51 The Concept of Half-Life

• The time it takes for half of the parent nuclides

in a radioactive sample to decay to the

daughter nuclides is called the half-life.

– One half-life is always ½ of what was

present at the start.

– Two half-lives is ¼ of what was present at

the start.

– Three half-lives is 1/8 of what was present

at the start.

Page 52: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

52 Different Nuclides Decay at Different Rates

• Thorium-232 has a half-life of 1.4 × 1010, or 14 billion years.

• Radon-220 has a half-life of approximately 1 minute.

Page 53: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

53 Illustration of Half-Life

Page 54: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

54

Ch 17.7-17.10

Topic: Fission vs. Fusion

EQ: How is radiation

important to us and how

is it harmful to us?

Page 55: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

55 Chemistry and Health: Environmental Radon

• Radon—a radioactive gas.

• Radon can attach to dust particles and then be

inhaled into the lungs, where it could increase

lung cancer risk.

• The radioactive decay of radon is by far the

single greatest source of human radiation

exposure.

• Radon-222 has a half-life of 3.8 days.

Page 56: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

56 Map of the United States Showing Radon Levels

• Excessively high

indoor radon levels

require the installation

of a ventilation system

to purge radon from

the house. Lower

levels can be

ventilated by keeping

windows and doors

open.

Zone 1 counties have the highest levels, and zone 3

counties have the lowest.

Page 57: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

57 The Discovery of Nuclear Fission: Fermi’s Role

• In the mid-1930s, Enrico

Fermi (1901–1954), an

Italian physicist, tried to

synthesize a new element by

bombarding uranium with

neutrons.

• The element with atomic

number 100 is named

fermium, in honor of Enrico

Fermi.

Page 58: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

58 Nuclear Fission Reported

On January 6, 1939, Scientists reported that the

neutron bombardment of uranium resulted in

nuclear fission—the splitting of the atom.

Page 59: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

59 History of the Atomic Bomb

• U.S. scientists realized that uranium enriched with U-

235 could undergo a chain reaction. The result would

be a self-amplifying reaction capable of producing an

enormous amount of energy—an atomic bomb.

• Several U.S. scientists persuaded Albert Einstein to

write a letter to President Franklin Roosevelt warning

of the possibility of Germany constructing an atomic

bomb.

• In 1941, Roosevelt assembled the resources for the top-

secret Manhattan Project. Its main goal was to build an

atomic bomb before the Germans did.

• The project was led by physicist J. R. Oppenheimer

(1904–1967) and was headquartered at the high-

security research facility in Los Alamos, New Mexico.

Page 60: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

60 History of the Atomic Bomb

• Four years later, on July 16, 1945, the world’s first

nuclear weapon was tested New Mexico. The first

atomic bomb exploded with a force equivalent to

18,000 tons of dynamite.

• Meanwhile, the Germans had not been successful in

making a nuclear bomb.

• Instead, the atomic bomb was used on Japan. One

bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, and a second bomb

was dropped on Nagasaki. Together, the bombs killed

approximately 200,000 people and forced Japan to

surrender.

• World War II was ended.

Page 61: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

61 The Testing of the World’s First Nuclear Bomb at Alamogordo,

New Mexico, in 1945

Page 62: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

62 Nuclear Power: Using Fission to Generate Electricity

• A nuclear-powered electrical

plant can produce a lot of

electricity with a small

amount of fuel.

• Nuclear power plants generate

electricity by using fission to

generate heat.

• The heat is used to boil water

and create steam, which turns

the turbine on a generator to

produce electricity.

• The fission reaction occurs in

the nuclear core of the power

plant, or reactor.

Page 63: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

63 Problems at Chernobyl Nuclear Power Generator

• Fission reaction occurring in a nuclear power plant can overheat.

• This type of accident occurred in Chernobyl in the former Soviet Union on April 26, 1986.

• The nuclear core overheated and began to burn.

• The accident caused 31 deaths directly and produced a fire that scattered radioactive debris into the atmosphere, making the surrounding countryside uninhabitable. The overall death toll from subsequent cancers is undetermined at this time.

• Reactor cores in the United States are not made of graphite and could not burn in the way that the Chernobyl core did.

Page 64: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

64 Problems at Fukushima Nuclear Power Generator

• Another accident occurred at the Nuclear Power Plant

in Japan in March of 2011. (5 years ago)

• A 9.0 magnitude earthquake triggered a tsunami that

flooded the coastal plant and caused the plant’s

cooling system pumps to fail.

• Several of the nuclear cores within the plant

overheated (fuel gets so hot that it melts).

• The release of radiation into the environment, while

significant, was lower in Japan than at Chernobyl.

• The cleanup of the site, however, will continue for

many years.

Page 65: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

65 Some Problems with Nuclear Power Generation

Waste Disposal

• The amount of nuclear fuel used in electricity

generation is small compared to that of other

fuels

• The products of the reaction are radioactive and

have very long half-lives (thousands of years or

more).

• Currently, in the United States, nuclear waste is

stored on site at the nuclear power plants.

• A permanent disposal site was being developed

in Yucca Mountain, Nevada.

Page 66: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

66 Nuclear Fusion: The Power of the Sun

• Nuclear fusion is the combination of two light

nuclei to form a heavier one.

• Nuclear fusion is the basis of nuclear weapons

called hydrogen bombs. A modern hydrogen

bomb has up to 1000 times the explosive force

of the first atomic bombs. These bombs

employ the following fusion reaction:

Page 67: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

67 The Effects of Radiation on Life

Radiation Damage

• The high levels of radiation kill large numbers of cells.

• People exposed to high levels of radiation have weakened

immune systems and a lowered ability to absorb nutrients from

food.

• In milder cases, recovery is possible with time.

• In more extreme cases, death results, often from infection.

Page 68: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

68 The Effects of Radiation on Life

Increased Cancer Risk

• Lower doses of radiation over extended periods of time

can increase cancer risk because radiation can damage

DNA.

• Changes in DNA can cause cells to grow abnormally

and to become cancerous.

• Cancerous cells grow into tumors that can spread and,

in some cases, cause death.

• Cancer risk increases with increased radiation exposure.

Page 69: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

69 The Effects of Radiation on Life

Genetic Defects

• Another possible effect of radiation exposure is

genetic defects in offspring.

• If radiation damages the DNA of reproductive cells—

such as eggs or sperm—then the offspring that

develop from those cells may have genetic

abnormalities.

Page 70: Teacher Notes: Ch 17 Nuclear Chemistry

70 Radioactivity in Medicine

• An isotope scan Technetium-

99 is often used as the

radiation source for bone

scans.

• Phosphorus-32 is used to

image tumors because it is

preferentially taken up by

cancerous tissue.

• Iodine-131 is used to diagnose

thyroid disorders.