Nuclear Physics Properties of Nuclei Binding Energy Radioactivity.

21
Nuclear Physics Properties of Nuclei Binding Energy Radioactivity

Transcript of Nuclear Physics Properties of Nuclei Binding Energy Radioactivity.

Nuclear Physics

Properties of Nuclei

Binding Energy

Radioactivity

Nuclear Components• Nucleus contains nucleons: protons and neutrons• Atomic number Z = number of protons• Neutron number N = number of neutrons• Mass number A = number of nucleons = Z + N

• Each element has unique Z value• Isotopes of element have same Z, but different N

and A values

XAZNotation: 29

64 Cu, 47108 Ag, 79

197 Au⏟unique elements

11 H, 1

2 H, 13 H⏟

isotopes

Nucleus Charge and Mass

Particle Charge Mass (kg) Mass (u) Mass (MeV/c2)

Proton +e 1.672 6 E−27 1.007 276 938.28

Neutron 0 1.675 0 E−27 1.008 665 939.57

Electron −e 9.109 E−31 5.486 E−4 0.511

• Unified mass unit, u, defined using Carbon 12

• Mass of 1 atom of 12C ≡ 12 u

227 MeV 494.931kg 10559 660.1u 1 c

Nuclei Sizes

• Scattering experiments determine size

• Measured in femtometers (aka fermis)

• All nuclei have nearly the same density

1.29310 Arr

Fig. 29.2, p. 959

m 10fm 1 15

r0=1.2 fm

Nuclear Stability• An attractive nuclear

force must balance the repulsive electric force

• Called the strong nuclear force

• Neutrons and protons affected by the strong nuclear force

• 260 stable nuclei• If Z > 83, not stable

Fig. 29.3, p. 960

Binding Energy• Total energy of

nucleus is less than combined energy of individual nucleons

• Difference is called the binding energy (aka mass defect)

• Energy required to separate nucleus into its constituents

Fig. 29.4, p. 961

Binding Energy vs. Mass Number

Ai mmm

Radioactivity

• Unstable nuclei decay to more stable nuclei• Can emit 3 types of radiation in the process

photonsenergy high :rays

or :particles

nuclei He :particles 42

ee

Fig. 29.5, p. 962

A positron (e+) is the antiparticle of the electron (e−)

Decay Constant and Half-Life• Decay rate (aka activity) is number of

decays per second• λ is the decay constant• Unit is Curie (Ci) or Becquerel (Bq)• Decay is exponential• Half-life is time it takes for half of the

sample to decay

3.29Nt

NR

Fig. 29.6, p. 919

a4.290teNN

5.29693.02ln

21 T

sdecays 103.7Ci 1 10 sdecay 1Bq 1

Alpha Decay• Unstable nucleus emits

particle (i.e., a helium nucleus) spontaneously

• Mass of parent is greater than mass of daughter plus particle

• Most of KE carried away by particle Fig 29.7, p. 966

29.8HeYX 42

42

AZ

AZ

Beta Decay• Involves conversion of proton to

neutron or vice-versa

• Involves the weak nuclear force

• KE carried away by electron/antineutrino or positron/neutrino pair

• Neutrinos: q = 0, m < 1 eV/c2, spin ½, very weak interaction with matter

Fig. 29.8a, p. 968

enp

epn10

11

11

10

12.29eYX

11.29eYX

1

1

AZ

AZ

AZ

AZ

Gamma (γ) Decay• Following radioactive decay, nucleus may be left

in an excited state

• Undergoes nuclear de-excitation: protons/neutrons move to lower energy level

• Nucleus emits high energy photons (γ rays)

• No change in A or Z results

eCB *126

125

CC 126

126 *

Radioactive Carbon Dating

• Cosmic rays create 14

C

from 14

N

• Constant ratio of 14

C/ 12

C

(1.3×10–12

) in atmosphere

• Living organisms have same ratio

• Dead organisms do not (no longer absorb C)

• T½ of 14

C = 5730 yr

• Measure decay rates, R

00

ln RRteRR t

Natural Radioactivity• Three series of naturally occurring

radioactivity

• 232Th more plentiful than

238U or

235U

• Nuclear power plants use enriched uranium

• Other series artificially produced

Thorium Series

Fig. 29.10, p. 971

Nuclear Reactions• Accelerators can

generate particle energies up to 1 TeV

• Bombard a nucleus with energetic particles

• Nucleus captures the particle

• Result is fission or fusion

• Atomic and mass numbers (Z and A) must remain balanced

• Mass difference before and after reaction determines Q value– Exothermic: Q > 0– Endothermic: Q < 0

• Endothermic requires incoming particle to have KEminKEmin=(1+ m

M ) ∣Q∣

Fusion and Fission

Interaction of Radiation with Matter

• Radioactive emissions can ionize atoms

• Problems occur when these ions (e.g., OH−, H+) react chemically with other ions

• Genetic damage affects reproductive cells

• Somatic damage affects other cells (lesions, cataracts, cancer, fibrosis, etc.)

Quantifying Radioactivity

Quantity Definition SI unit Common Unit

Activity # nuclei that decay per sec

1 Bq ≡ 1 decay/s 1 Ci = 3.70×1010 Bq

Exposure (defined for X and γ rays only)

Ionization per kg

1 R ≡ amount of radiation that produces 2.58×10−4 C/kg

Roentgen (R)

Absorbed Dose (D)Energy absorbed per kg

1 Gray (Gy) ≡ 1 J/kg

1 rad = 10−2 Gy

Relative Biological Effectiveness (RBE)

How much more damage is done compared to X or γ rays of equivalent energy (unitless).

Dose Equivalent (H)Damage expected

1 Sv ≡ 1 RBE×Gy

1 rem = 10−2 Sv

RBE Factors

Radiation Type RBE Factor

X and γ rays 1.0

β particles 1.0−1.7

α particles 10−20

Slow n 4−5

Fast n and p 10

Heavy ions 20

Table 29.3, p. 974

Sources of Ionizing Radiation

From Touger, Introductory Physics, Table 28-4, p. 817

Typical Dose Equivalents

From Touger, Introductory Physics, Table 28-4, p. 817

Exercise• Is the dose equivalent greater if you are

exposed to a 100 mrad dose of α particles or a 300 mrad dose of β particles?

α particles: rem 1mrad 10010min H

β particles: rem 51.0mrad 3007.1max H

α particles are more effective at delivering a dose, but do not penetrate as far as β particles

rem 1.0mrad 1001min H

rem 6mrad 30020max H