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Nuclear Changes Nuclear Energy

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Title: Nuclear Changes Nuclear Energy


1
Nuclear ChangesNuclear Energy An introduction
  • Chapter 9

2
Radioactivity
  • Radioactive materials have an unstable nucleus
    that release one or more particles or energy
  • Nuclear radiation refers to the released energy
    and matter.

3
  • Where does radiation come from?
  • Radiation is generally produced when particles
    interact or decay
  • A large contribution of the radiation on the
    earth is from the sun (solar) or from radioactive
    isotopes of the elements (terrestrial)
  • Radiation is going through you at this very
    moment!

4
Isotopes (a review)
  • Whats an isotope?
  • Two or more varieties of an element having the
    same number of protons but different number of
    neutrons. Certain isotopes are unstable and
    decay to lighter isotopes or elements.Deuterium
    and tritium are isotopes of hydrogen. In
    addition to the 1 proton, they have 1 and 2
    additional neutrons in the nucleus respectively.

5
Nuclear Radiation
  • As the radioactive nucleus decays, nuclear
    radiation leaves the nucleus and interacts with
    other matter.
  • Types of nuclear radiation (4)
  • 1. Alpha Particles (a)
  • 2. Beta particles (b)
  • 3. Gamma rays (g)
  • 4. Neutron emission

6
  • 1. Alpha Particles a positively charged particle
    and has a large mass. (consists of 2 protons and
    2 neutrons).
  • Do not travel far because of its size.
  • Can barely travel through a piece of paper.


Radium R226
Radon Rn222

a (4He)
86 protons 136 neutrons
2 protons 2 neutrons
88 protons 138 neutrons
The alpha-particle (a) is a Helium nucleus.
Its the same as the element Helium, with the
electrons stripped off !
7
  • 2. Beta Particles negatively charged particle
    that has little mass
  • Travels much faster than alpha particles
  • Travel through 3mm of aluminum or 10 mm of
    woodbut are stopped because they lose energy
    fairly quickly.

Carbon C14
Nitrogen N14

e-
electron (beta-particle)
6 protons 8 neutrons
7 protons 7 neutrons
We see that one of the neutrons from the C14
nucleus converted into a proton, and an
electron was ejected. The remaining nucleus
contains 7p and 7n, which is a nitrogen nucleus.

8
  • Gamma Rays are not made of matter and do not
    have an electric charge
  • Gamma Rays consist of electromagnetic energy
    called PHOTONS
  • Have very high energycan travel through 60 cm of
    aluminum or 7 cm of lead
  • Gamma Rays are more dangerous to living things
    than alpha or beta particles.

9
Gamma particles (g)
In much the same way that electrons in atoms can
be in an excited state, so can a nucleus.
Neon Ne20
Neon Ne20

10 protons 10 neutrons(in excited state)
10 protons 10 neutrons(lowest energy state)
gamma
A gamma is a high energy light particle. It is
NOT visible by your naked eye because it is not
in the visible part of the EM spectrum.
10
Gamma Rays
Neon Ne20
Neon Ne20

The gamma from nuclear decayis in the X-ray/
Gamma ray part of the EM spectrum(very
energetic!)
11
Nuclear Radiation
  • Neutron Emission The release of a neutron from a
    nucleusdoes not have any charge.
  • Can travel much farther because they do not lose
    energy very quickly.
  • Can travel through a 15 cm block of lead.

12
Half-Life
  • The half-life (h) is the time it takes for
    half the atoms of a radioactive substance to
    decay.
  • For example, suppose we had 20,000 atoms of a
    radioactive substance. If the half-life is 1
    hour, how many atoms of that substance would be
    left after

10,000 (50)
1 hour (one lifetime) ?
5,000 (25)
2 hours (two lifetimes) ?
2,500 (12.5)
3 hours (three lifetimes) ?
13
Predicting Age
  • Scientists use the Half-Life of an object to
    determine its age.
  • For example Potassium-40 decays to Argon-40, so
    the ratio of Potassium-40 to argon-40 is smaller
    for older rocks than it is for younger rocks.
  • Scientists use Carbon-14 to date more recent
    materials like remains of an animal or parts of
    ancient clothing.

14
Practicing Half-Life
  • Radium 226 has a half-life of 1599 years. How
    long would it take seven-eighths of a radium-226
    sample to decay?
  • Given half-life 1599 years
  • Given fraction of sample decayed 7/8
  • Unknown fraction of sample remaining
  • Unknown total time of decay

15
  • 1. Calculate the fraction of radioactive sample
    remaining.
  • Fraction of sample remaining 1 7/8 1/8
  • 2. Calculate the number of half-lives
  • Amount of sample remaining after one half-life
    ½
  • Amount of sample remaining after 2 half-lives ¼
  • Amount of sample remaining after 3 half-lives
    1/8
  • 3 Half-lives are needed for one-eighth of the
    sample to remain undecayed.
  • 3. Calculate the total time required for the
    radioactive decay.
  • Total time of decay 3 half-lives x 1599 years
    4797 years

16
Radioactive Dating Game
  • Sign out a laptop
  • Log in and open the Internet
  • Go to phet.colorado.edu
  • New Sims - PhET Simulations

17
Nuclear Energy
  • Basics of Nuclear Power Video Clip

18
Brief History
  • Nuclear energy was first discovered in 1934 by
    Enrico Fermi
  • The first nuclear bombs were built in 1945 as a
    result of the Manhattan Project
  • The first plutonium bomb (Trinity) was detonated
    on July 16, 1945
  • The first uranium bomb was detonated over
    Hiroshima on August 6th 1945
  • The second plutonium bomb was dropped on Nagasaki
    on August 9th 1945
  • Electricity was produced with nuclear energy in
    1951.

19
Fission History and Overview
  • Discovered 1938 by Otto Hahn and Frittz
    Strassmann
  • Presented in 1939 by Lise Meitner and Otto Frisch
  • Research of Nuclear Fission began U.S. weapons
    program
  • 1942 first controlled self sustaining fission
    reaction by Enrico Fermi
  • Nuclear fission creates Electricity

20
Fission Overview
  • Fission is the process of splitting heavier
    nuclei into lighter nuclei
  • Fission releases Energy
  • The mass equivalent of 1kg of matter is more than
    the chemical energy of 22 million tons of TNT
  • Neutrons released by fission can start a chain
    reactiona continuous series of nuclear fission
    reactions.

21
Fission Today
  • 435 Nuclear Power plants worldwide
  • 1/6 of the worlds power is nuclear
  • World Energy Consumption doubled by 2050
  • World will turn to fission energy

22
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23
World Nuclear Power Plants How Stuff Works -
Nuclear Energy
24
United States Nuclear Power Plants
25
Nuclear Power in Northeast U.S.
26
Japans Nuclear Power Problems
27
Japans Power Plant Meltdown
  • Japans Nuclear Emergency
  • Efforts to cool down the nuclear reactor
  • Concerns about Proximity to the Power plant

28
Fusion Overview and History
  • British Physicists in the 1940s and 50s housed
    ina hangar at Harwell a device called ZETA-Zero
    Energy Toroidal Assembly which was the first
    fusion based operating system
  • Masked in the secrecy of the Cold War
  • Fusion is the production of a thermonuclear
    reaction in a gas discharge
  • Called fusion because it is based on fusing light
    nuclei such as hydrogen isotopes to release
    energy, similar to that which powers the sun and
    other stars.

29
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30
Fast Facts
  • A vast, new source of energy
  • Fuels are plentiful
  • Inherently safe since any malfunction results in
    a rapid shutdown
  • No atmospheric pollution leading to acid rain or
    the greenhouse effect
  • Sunlight is energy released from fusion reactions
    in the sun.

31
The Future is Fusion
  • The sun is our greatest source of energythe sun
    uses fusion.
  • The source of fusion is vastly abundant in our
    oceans (an isotope of hydrogen in water)
  • The waste of fusion is helium, and there is no
    pollution of long term extent
  • The price of fusion is estimated to be equivalent
    to that of fossil fuels
  • Fusion can give us energy for millions of years

32
Nuclear Waste
33
Most used Nuclear Waste Sites
34
Nuclear Waste
  • Nuclear Waste has been accumulating since the
    mid-1940s and is currently in temporary storage
    at 131 sites in 39 states
  • Nuclear waste remains highly radioactive for
    thousands of years.
  • It will still be potentially harmful to humans
    long after the manmade containers holding the
    waste have disintegrated.

35
Yucca Mountain
  • Will become the nation's first long-term geologic
    repository for spent nuclear fuel and high-level
    radioactive waste that is currently stored at 126
    sites around the nation.
  • Yucca Mountain is located in a remote desert on
    federally protected land within the secure
    boundaries of the Nevada Test Site in Nye County,
    Nevada. It is approximately 100 miles northwest
    of Las Vegas, Nevada.

36
Nuclear Radiation Today
37
Radiation
  • You are exposed to radiation everyday
  • Background Radiation nuclear radiation that
    arises naturally from cosmic rays and from
    radioactive isotopes in the soil and air
  • We are adapted to survive low levels of this
    natural source of radiation
  • Radiation is measured in rems or millirems

38
What are the Possible Effects of Radiation?
  • Inside Chernobyl - National Geographic Magazine
  • Kasakhstan Fallout Video Clip
  • Safety Videos
  • Duck and Cover
  • Living Under the Shadow of the Nuclear Umbrella
    Video Clip

39
Radiation Exposure
  • There are many occupations where people are
    exposed to higher levels of radiation.
  • Nuclear radiation, health physics, radiology,
    radiochemistry, X-ray technology, MRI
  • It has been decided that these occupations can be
    exposed to 5000 millirems annually plus regular
    background radiation.
  • Exposure amounts will also depend on where a
    person lives.
  • Exposure may increase based on some day-to-day
    activities as well

40
Radiation Exposure
  • Average annual radiation dose is 360 millirems
    per person. 300 from natural sources.
  • Sleeping next to someone for 8 hours 2 mrems
  • Exposure comes from the naturally radioactive
    potassium in the other person's body
  • Coal plant, living within 50 miles .03 mrem
    There is much thorium and uranium in coal.
  • Living within 50 miles of a nuclear power plant
    adds .009 mrem of exposure. Both figures are
    considered extremely low levels.
  • Living in a masonry home 7 mrems Stone, brick
    and adobe have natural radioisotopes in them.
  • Living on the Earth 200 mrems We are living in a
    sea of radon. It is made from the natural decay
    of uranium and thorium in the soil, left over
    from the creation of the solar system. Radon is a
    rare gas that diffuses out of soil and into the
    air. It contributes more than half of our
    background

41
  • Smoking up to 16,000 mrems The tobacco leaf acts
    like the absorbing surface of charcoal in a radon
    test kit. It collects long-lived isotopes of
    airborne radon, like lead-210 and polonium. Small
    portions of the lungs can get relatively whopping
    doses, compared to background levels.
  • Porcelain teeth or crowns tenths of a rem
    Uranium is often added to these dental products
    to increase whiteness and florescence.
  • Air Travel 1 mrem per 1000 miles 30,000 feet
    above the ground you're closer to the ionizing
    radiation (high-energy gammas well as particles)
    from the sun.
  • Grand Central Station, NYC 120 mrem for
    employees Its granite walls have a high uranium
    content.
  • Brazil Nuts This is the world's most radioactive
    food due to high radium concentrations 1000-times
    that of average foods.The US Capitol Building in
  • Washington DC This building is so radioactive,
    due to the high uranium content in its granite
    walls, it could never be licensed as a nuclear
    power reactor site.

42
Radiation Exposure
  • 1500 increase in incidence of testicular and
    ovarian cancer in children on Navaho reservation
    in uranium mining area
  • 500 increase in bone cancer in children affected
    by uranium
  • 250 increase in leukemia (all ages) in the
    Navaho population
  • 200 increase in each of the following non-cancer
    effects miscarriage, infant death, congenital
    defects, genetic abnormalities, learning
    disorders.

43
  • 400 increase in leukemia incidence in the
    population living downwind of the Pilgrim nuclear
    power reactor in Massachusetts in the first 5
    years after fuel was know to have leaked excess
    radioactivity.Baseline Disease in population
    before and after Pilgrim radioactive releases and
    comparison to upwind population.
  • 300400 increase in lung cancer in the general
    population within the plume of the Three Mile
    Island accident releases
  • 600700 increase in leukemia in the general
    population within the plume of Three Mile Island
    accident releases Baseline Disease in population
    upwind (out of the radiation plume path) is
    compared to disease in population downwind (in
    the pollution plume.)
  • 50 increase in childhood cancer incidence in the
    Three Mile Island area for each 10 millirem
    increase in radiation exposure per year.

44
  • 500 increase in leukemia among Utah nuclear bomb
    test Downwinders
  • 121 increase in thyroid cancer incidence in the
    same group
  • 200 increase in breast cancer
  • 700 increase in bone cancer
  • a greater then 120 increase in thyroid cancer in
    those who drank milk laced with Iodine-131 from
    atmospheric nuclear weapons tests
  • 200 increase in lung cancer in women who
    received radiation treatments for breast cancer
  • 6696 increase in early cancer deaths due to
    background radiation

45
Radiation Exposure in the U.S.
46
Benefits of Nuclear Radiation
  • Nuclear radiation is used in a controlled way
  • Smoke Detectors use nuclear radiation in small
    amounts
  • Alpha particles are charged and produce an
    electric current
  • Detecting disease
  • Ultrasound, CT scanning, Radioactive tracers

47
Benefits in Medicine
  • Radioactive tracers are short-lived isotopes that
    tend to accumulate in specfic cellshelp to find
    tumors.

48
Benefits in Medicine
  • Radiotherapy is used to treat cancers.
  • Controlled doses of nuclear radiation are used to
    kill fast growing cells (also damages healthy
    cells)

49
Uses in Agriculture
  • Radioactive tracers are used to identify the flow
    of water and how it moves through the crops.
  • Help to identify biochemical processes

50
  • NUCLEAR RADIATION A REVIEW

51
Risks of Nuclear Radiation
  • Nuclear radiation reacts with living tissue
    (alpha, beta, and gamma particles)
  • They change the number of electrons in atoms of
    living materials
  • Alpha particles stopped by layer of clothing
  • Beta particles travel through a fraction of an
    inch in solids and liquids
  • Gamma particles depends on energy can travel
    through several feet.

52
Nuclear Radiation
53
Risk and Amount of Radiation
  • Small amount of nuclear radiation --- changes
    cannot be detected.
  • Relationship with high levels of nuclear
    radiation and cancer
  • Cancers related to radiation levels include
    leukemia, breast cancer, lung cancer, and stomach
    cancer
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