Title: Nuclear Chemistry
1Nuclear Chemistry
- Chemical Reactions
- Reactions of atoms or molecule to create and/or
break bonds. - Nuclear Reactions
- Reactions of atoms and/or particles involving a
nuclear change.
2Nuclear Reactions and Their Characteristics
- Nuclear Reactions
- Reactions of atomic nuclei
- Lead to change in the atom itself
- Usually results in the change of one element into
another. - The conclusion of alchemist attempts.
- Isotope
- Same atomic (Z) different mass (A).
- Z of protons A protons neutrons
3Nuclear Reactions and Their Characteristics
Mass of protons neutrons
Atomic of protons
4Nuclear Reactions and Their Characteristics
5Nuclear Reactions and Their Characteristics
- Characteristics of Nuclear Reactions
- Involve a change in nucleus.
- Different isotopes behave differently
- Rate is independent of T and P or catalysts
- Same reaction for elemental atoms or atoms in a
chemical compound. - Energy changes are very large!
- Can be on the order of 106 larger than a chemical
reaction.
6Nuclear Reactions and Radioactivity
- Early studies showed emission of particles and
energy from a radioactive nucleus (radionuclide). - Alpha Emission (a)
- Emission of 42He2 from the nucleus.
- Alpha particle helium ion.
- Reduces mass by 4 and atomic by 2.
7Nuclear Reactions and Radioactivity
- Beta Emission (ß-)
- Emission of -01e from nucleus.
- 10n ? 11p -01e
- Beta particle electron
- Increases the atomic by 1 mass remains the
same. - Gamma Radiation (?)
- Emission of high energy electromagnetic radiation
(? 1 x 10-13m). - An energy releasing mechanism for most nuclear
reactions.
8Nuclear Reactions and Radioactivity
- Positron Emission (ß)
- Emission of 01e from nucleus.
- 11p ? 10n 01e
- Positron (ß) positive electron
- Decreases the atomic by 1 mass remains the
same. - Electron Capture
- Capture of an inner-shell electron by the nucleus
- 11p -01e ? 10n
- X-Rays are emitted when another orbitals e falls
into the vacancy.
9Nuclear WeaponsUniv. Alberta
- If E mc2 the energy contained in matter is 9 x
1010 kJ/g for comparison with chemical reaction
energies. - In the actual fission of uranium-235, not all of
the mass of the uranium-235 is converted into
energy. Only about 0.1 is converted into energy
the rest of it makes up the mass of the fission
fragments. Thus fissioning uranium-235 produces
only 9 x 1013 x 0.001 9 x 107 kJ / gram. This
is still a very large value relative to the
energies involved in chemical reactions. - The explosion of one gram of the military
explosive trinitrotoluene (TNT) will produce
2.760 kJ. Thus the energy of one gram of
fissioning uranium-235 is about equal to that of
30 tonnes of exploding TNT. Clearly, the energy
involved in nuclear devices is very much larger
than the energy involved in the chemical
reactions of chemical explosive devices. The
first use of nuclear energy was a military use,
the atomic bombs dropped by the United States on
the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in
1945. - It is traditional to consider the power of
nuclear weapons in terms of the unit of tons of
TNT required to produce the same energy. The
nuclear weapons used on Hiroshima or Nagasaki in
1945 were comparatively small atomic bombs rated
at about 20 kilotons, or 20,000 tons of TNT
equivalent
10Radioactive Decay Rates
- Rate of Radioactive Decay
- of altered nuclides per unit time.
- A 1st order reaction.
- Since it is a decomposition process
- A ? B C energy
- Rate k A
- Concentration is the number of radioactive nuclei
(N) - Rate k N
11Radioactive Decay Rates
- Integrated 1st order rate law
- Log (N/N0) -kt/2.303
- N of nuclei after time t.
- N0 of original nuclei.
- t time
- Half Life
- Time required for ½ of nuclei to decay.
- t½ 0.693/k
- K 0.693/ t½
12Radioactive Decay Rates
13Radioactive Decay Rates
14Radioactive Decay Rates
- Carbon Dating
- Atmospheric ratio of 14C to 12C is constant.
- 14C /12C ratio is constant for living organisms
since C is continually replenished by CO2. - Once the living tissue dies the dynamic
equilibrium stops. 14C level begins to drop as
the nuclear reaction proceeds. - Age of the dead tissue can be determined by ½
life calculation. - Make the correlation to Potassium-40
15Southeast Missouri State Univ. Chem.
16Nuclear Stability
- Why are some nuclei stable and some are not?
- Definition of Stability.
- Non-radioactive.
- Measurable half-life.
- It has to do with neutrons.
- Acting as the glue that holds the protons from
flying away from each other in the core. - Certain specific arrangements or s make more
stable nuclides.
17Nuclear Stability
- Neutrons
- All isotopes larger than Bi-209 are radioactive.
- Proton-proton repulsions become so great that the
glue cannot stabilize the core. All nuclides
are radioactive above Z 83 - There are 264 stable nuclides.
- Paired protons and paired neutrons appear to be
most stable.
18Nuclear Stability
- 264 stable nuclides
- Stable protons neutrons
- 157 even even
- 52 even odd
- 50 odd even
- 5 odd odd
19Nuclear Stability
- Magic Numbers are most stable.
- Protons 2, 8, 20, 28, 50, 82
- Neutrons 2, 8, 20, 28, 50, 82, 126
- These numbers are proposed to be associated with
completed nuclear shells of protons and neutrons. - Similar to the shells of electronic orbitals.
- The description is extremely complex for general
chemistry description (more like 3rd year quantum
physics).
20Computational Science Orientation Program Oak
Ridge National Laboratory
Multi-body problem
21Oak Ridge National Laboratory
22Southeast Missouri State Univ. Chem.
23Southeast Missouri State Univ. Chem.
24Energy Changes During Nuclear Reactions
- Every reaction (even normal chemical reactions)
produce products that do not precisely conserve
mass. - The laws of mass conservation and energy
conservation must be combined to produce a
consistent explanation.
25Energy Changes During Nuclear Reactions
- E mc2
- E is in J or eV
- J 1Kgm2/s2 eV 1.6 x 10-19 J
- The mass of any nuclide is less than the mass of
the individual neutrons and protons. - E.g. helium-4
- Neutron 1.00866 amu
- Proton 1.00728 amu
26Energy Changes During Nuclear Reactions
- The difference between actual nuclear mass and
neutron proton mass is the mass defect. - For helium-4 this is 0.03038 g/mol or
- 2.73 x 109 kJ/mol as calculated by Einstein's
equation. - This number can also be used to calculate a
binding energy (a measure of nuclear stability)
often expressed as eV/nucleon. 7.08 MeV/nucleon
for helium-4. - For a chemical reaction this can be calculated
from the ?E for the reaction (either or ).
This amounts to about 1 x 10-9 g / 100kJ of
energy (absorbed or released from a chemical
reaction)
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29Nuclear Fission and Fusion
- Fission
- The fragmenting of heavy nuclei into smaller
ones. - Fusion
- The joining together of light nulei.
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32Nuclear Fission and Fusion
- Chain Reaction
- Self sustaining series of nuclear fissions
created by absorption of neutrons from previous
fissions. - Continues even when outside neutron source is cut
off. - Critical Mass
- Smallest mass of radioactive material that can
sustain a chain reaction. - Critical mass for 235U is 56 Kg.
33Nuclear Reactors
- Corrections from Friday.
- Boron and/or Cadmium rods mixed with Uranium
rods. - Uranium rods are mixture of 238U and 235U.
- Kept at 235U level of 3.
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39Fusion
- A very attractive power source.
- Same as the sun.
- Uses abundant materials
- Produces no radioactive products or pollutants.
- Extremely high activation energy (T 4 x 107K)
- Containment is a key problem.
- Some short reactions have been sustained (1s)
using magnetic fields.
40Nuclear Transmutation
- The creation of new elements by bombarding them
with high energy particles. - Uranium-238 Helium-4 ? Plutonium-241.
41Biological Effects
- Units of radiation dose.
- Curie dose equal to 1g of radium.
- Rad (Radiation Absorbed Dose)
- absorption of 0.01J/Kg
- Sievert (Sv) SI unit measuring amount of
tissue damage caused by 1J/Kg. - Rem (Roentgen Equivalent in Man) 0.01SV
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43Web Sites
- http//www.uic.com.au/education.htm
- http//www.ems.psu.edu/radovic/Chernobyl.html