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The atom orbiting electrons Nucleus (protons and neutrons)

The atom

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The atom. orbiting electrons. Nucleus (protons and neutrons). Nuclide notation. Nucleon number (A) = number of protons and neutrons. Neutron number (N) = A - Z. 7. Li. 3. Proton number (Z) = number of protons . 7. 6. Li. Li. 3. 3. Isotopes. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The atom

The atomorbiting electrons

Nucleus (protons and neutrons)

Page 2: The atom

Nuclide notation

Li3

7

Proton number (Z) = number of protons

Nucleon number (A) = number of protons and neutrons

Neutron number (N) = A - Z

Page 3: The atom

Isotopes

Li3

7

It is possible for the nuclei of the same element to have different numbers of neutrons in the nucleus (but it must have the same number of protons)

Li3

6

Page 4: The atom

Isotopes

Li3

7

For example, Lithium atoms occur in two forms, Lithium-6 and Lithium-7

Li3

6

4 neutrons3 neutrons

Page 5: The atom

Isotopes of Hydrogen

H1

1

The three isotopes of Hydrogen even have their own names!

H1

2

H1

3

Hi! I’m hydrogen

They call me

deuterium

Hola! Mi nombre es tritium y yo

soy de Madrid!

Page 6: The atom

How do we know the structure of the atom?

Page 7: The atom

The famous Geiger-Marsden Alpha scattering experiment

In 1909, Geiger and Marsden were studying how alpha particles are scattered by a thin gold foil.

Alpha source

Thin gold foil

Page 8: The atom

Geiger-Marsden

As expected, most alpha particles were detected at very small scattering angles

Alpha particles

Thin gold foil Small-angle scattering

Page 9: The atom

Geiger-Marsden

To their great surprise, they found that some alpha particles (1 in 20 000) had very large scattering angles

Alpha particles

Thin gold foil Small-angle scattering

Large-angle scattering

Page 10: The atom

Explaining Geiger and Marsdens’ results

The results suggested that the positive (repulsive) charge must be concentrated at the centre of the atom. Most alpha particles do not pass close to this so pass undisturbed, only alpha particles passing very close to this small nucleus get repelled backwards (the nucleus must also be very massive for this to happen).

nucleus

Page 11: The atom

Rutherford did the calculations!Atomic nucleus had a diameter of about 10-15 m

That’s 100,000 times smaller than the size of an atom (about 10-10 meters).

Page 12: The atom

Stadium as atom

If the nucleus of an atom was a ping-pong ball, the atom would be the size of a football stadium (and mostly full of nothing)!

Nucleus (ping-pong ball

Page 13: The atom

Forces in the Nucleus

Page 14: The atom

Coulomb Force in Nucleus

• Repulsive force between protons

+

+

Page 15: The atom

The Strong Force

The nucleons (protons and neutrons) in the nucleus are bound together by the strong nuclear force

Page 16: The atom

Strong Force

• Acts over short distances (10-15 m)• Acts only between adjacent particles in the

nucleus• Carried by “gluons”

Page 17: The atom

Why is a nucleus unstable?

Because of the relative numbers of p and nEx. Uranium 235

Hi! I’m uranium-235 and I’m unstable. I really need to

lose some particles from my nucleus to become more

stable.

Page 18: The atom

The unstable nucleus emits a particle to become stable

Thus, the atom (nucleus) has decayed.

Weeeeeeeeeeeeee!

Page 19: The atom

Decay of an Unstable Nucleus1. Random –

It’s going to happen, but when?!

2. Spontaneous – Not affected by temperature, pressure etc.

Weeeeeeeeeeeeee!

Page 20: The atom

Becquerels (Bq)

• The amount of radioactivity given out by a substance is measured in Becquerels.

• One Becquerel is one particle emitted per second.

Page 21: The atom

How to detect particles?

• Photographic film

• Fluorescence

• Geiger-Müller tube (GM tube) connected to a counter (counts the # of particles)– Use filters to distinguish alpha, beta, and

gamma particles

Page 22: The atom

Three main types of particles can be ejected from an unstable nucleus.

Page 23: The atom

Alpha particles

αHi!

Page 24: The atom

Alpha particles• 2 protons and 2 neutrons joined together

– Helium nucleus• Stopped by paper or a few cm of air• Highly ionising• Deflected by electric and strong magnetic

fields

He2

4 2+

α2

4

Page 25: The atom

Alpha Decay

U92

235

Th90

231

+Atomic number goes down by 2

Atomic mass goes down by 4

He2

4 2+

Page 26: The atom

Alpha Decay

U92

235

Th90

231

+Atomic number goes down by 2

Atomic mass goes down by 4

α2

4

Page 27: The atom

Beta particles

βYo!

Page 28: The atom

Beta particles

• Fast moving electrons or positrons• Stopped by about 3 mm of aluminium• Weakly ionising• Deflected by electric and magnetic fields

e-1

0 β-1

0 e+1

0 β+1

0

Beta Negative electron Beta Positive Positron

Page 29: The atom

• In the nucleus a neutron [or proton] changes into an electron [positron] (the beta particle which is ejected) and a proton [neutron] (which stays in the nucleus) and an antineutrino [neutrino]– During beta decay the mass number stays the same but

the proton number goes up [or down] by 1.

e + עe

Beta decay

e + עe-1

0Ca20

46

Sc +21

46 0

0

antineutrino

+1

0K19

40

Ar +18

40 0

0

neutrino

Page 30: The atom

• In the nucleus a neutron [or proton] changes into an electron [positron] (the beta particle which is ejected) and a proton [neutron] (which stays in the nucleus) and an antineutrino [neutrino]– During beta decay the mass number stays the same but

the proton number goes up [or down] by 1.

β + עe

Beta decay

β + עe-1

0Ca20

46

Sc +21

46 0

0

antineutrino

+1

0K19

40

Ar +18

40 0

0

neutrino

Page 31: The atom

Gamma rays

Hola!

Page 32: The atom

Gamma rays

• High frequency electromagnetic radiation• Stopped by several cm of lead• Very weakly ionising• NOT affected by electric or magnetic fields

Page 33: The atom

Gamma raysUsually associated with alpha decayExcited nucleus relaxes by releasing a

gamma ray.

U92

235

Th*90

231

+ α

Th 90

231

+

Page 34: The atom

Biological Effects of Localized Radiation Exposure

• Short Term – Low dosage – skin reddening– High dosage – skin or tissue necrosis

• Long Term – through direct or indirect actions– Damages or mutates DNA and other cells

(specific concern: somatic cells)– Potential cancer causing

Page 35: The atom

Best Practice: Prevention!• Limit Radiation Concentration (in labs)

• Limit Exposure Time

• Increase Distance

• Use Appropriate Shielding Materials

Page 36: The atom

½ - life

• The decay of a single nuclei is totally random

• However, with large numbers of atoms a pattern does occur

Page 37: The atom

½ - life

• This is the time it takes half the nuclei to decay

half-life (t½)

Number of nuclei undecayed

time

Page 38: The atom

½ - life

• This is the time it takes half the nuclei to decay

half-life (t½)

Number of nuclei undecayed

time

Page 39: The atom

½ - life

• This is the time it takes half the nuclei to decay

half-life (t½)

Number of nuclei undecayed

timeA graph of the count rate against time will be the same shape

Page 40: The atom

Different ½ - lives

• Different isotopes have different half-lives• The ½-life could be a few milliseconds or

5000 million years!

half-life (t½)

Number of nuclei undecayed

time

Page 41: The atom

Decay Constant (λ)

• The probability that an atom will decay

– Remember that the decay of a single nuclei is totally random

• Activity = the decay constant times the number of atoms– Equation A = λ N

Page 42: The atom

Determining ½ - lives• For short half-lives

– Use a GM-tube to measure initial activity, and then measure the time it takes for that activity to decrease by a half.

– That time is the half-life!• For long half-lives

– Use a GM-tube to measure the initial Activity– Measure the mass of the sample

• Calculate the # of atoms using molar mass and Avogadro’s number

– Calculate λ [decay constant] from A0 = λ N0

– Calculate half-life t1/2 = ln(2) / λ

Page 43: The atom

Nuclear Reactions

Page 44: The atom

Unified mass unit (u)

• Defined as 1/12 of the mass of an atom of Carbon-12

u = 1.6605402 x 10-27 kg

Page 45: The atom

Energy mass equivalence

• E = mc2

• E = 1.6605402 x 10-27 x (2.9979 x 108)2

• E = 1.4923946316 x 10-10 J

• Remembering 1 eV = 1.602177 x 10-19 J• 1 u = 931.5 MeV• The electron-Volt is a convenient unit of

energy for nuclear physics

Page 46: The atom

Mass defect

For helium, the mass of the nucleus = 4.00156 u

But, the mass of two protons and two nuetrons = 4.0320 u!!!!

Where is the missing mass?

Page 47: The atom

Mass defect

The missing mass (mass defect) has been stored as energy in the nucleus. It is called the binding energy of the nucleus.

It can be found from E = mc2

Page 48: The atom

Mass defect calculation

• Find the mass defect of the nucleus of gold, 196.97 - Au

Page 49: The atom

Mass defect calculation

• The mass of this isotope is 196.97u• Since it has 79 electrons its nuclear mass

is 196.97u – 79x0.000549u = 196.924u

Page 50: The atom

Mass defect calculation

• The mass of this isotope is 196.97u• Since it has 79 electrons its nuclear mass

is 196.97u – 79x0.000549u = 196.924u• This nucleus has 79 protons and 118

neutrons, individually these have a mass of 79x1.0007276u + 118x1.008665u = 198.080u

Page 51: The atom

Mass defect calculation

• The mass of this isotope is 196.97u• Since it has 79 electrons its nuclear mass is

196.97u – 79x0.000549u = 196.924u• This nucleus has 79 protons and 118

neutrons, individually these have a mass of 79x1.0007276u + 118x1.008665u = 198.080u

• The difference in mass (mass defect) is therefore 1.156u

Page 52: The atom

Mass defect calculation

• The difference in mass (mass defect) is therefore 1.156u

• This “missing mass” is stored as energy in the nucleus (binding energy).

• 1u is equivalent to 931.5 MeV

Page 53: The atom

Nuclear ReactionsSimilar calculation as mass defect – the products

have less mass that the reactants, and the lost mass is converted into KE of the products

Transmutation - the conversion of the nucleus of one isotope or element into another

Artificial (induced) transmutation – the energy required for transmutation is provided by “artificial” means

Page 54: The atom

EX. Artificial Transmutation – bombard a nitrogen atom with a high E alpha particle

N7

14

+ O8

17

+ p1

1

He2

4 2+

N7

14

+ O8

17

+ p1

1α2

4

Page 55: The atom

Binding energy

The work (energy) required to completely separate the nucleons of the nucleus.

Page 56: The atom

Binding energy per nucleonThe BE / nucleon number

- the work (energy) required to completely remove 1 nucleon from a nucleus

It is a measure of how stable the nucleus is.

Page 57: The atom

The binding energy curve

Page 58: The atom

Let’s do some reading!

Page 59: The atom

Nuclear Fission

Page 60: The atom

Uranium

Uranium 235 has a large unstable nucleus.

                                                                 

Page 61: The atom

Capture

A lone neutron hitting the nucleus can be captured by the nucleus, forming Uranium 236.

Page 62: The atom

Fission and free neutrons

Uranium 236 is very unstable and splits (nuclear fission) into two smaller nuclei (called daughter nuclei) and three neutrons (with lots of kinetic energy)

Page 63: The atom

Fission

These free neutrons can strike more uranium nuclei, causing them to split.

Page 64: The atom

Chain ReactionIf there is enough uranium (critical mass) a chain reaction occurs. Huge amounts of energy are released very quickly.

                                                                                                                                   

Page 65: The atom

Chain ReactionIf there is enough uranium (critical mass) a chain reaction occurs. Huge amounts of energy are released very quickly.

                                                                                                                                   

Page 66: The atom

Bang!This can result in a nuclear explosion! (movie is of a 23 ktonne nuke detonated underwater.)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b2WQvtGnBQw

Page 67: The atom
Page 68: The atom

Nuclear fusion – Star power!

Page 69: The atom

Nuclear fusion – Star power!

• http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/nucene/fusion.html#c1

• http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/astro/astfus.html#c1

• Check out the 2 links above to better understand all the types of nuclear reactions that occur in stars.

Page 70: The atom

The binding energy curve