1 / 24

Lecture 1: RDCH 702 Introduction

Lecture 1: RDCH 702 Introduction. Class organization Outcomes Grading Chart of the nuclides Description and use of chart Data Radiochemistry introduction Atomic properties Nuclear nomenclature X-rays Types of decays Forces. RDCH 702: Introduction. Outcomes for RDCH 702

tass
Télécharger la présentation

Lecture 1: RDCH 702 Introduction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lecture 1: RDCH 702 Introduction • Class organization • Outcomes • Grading • Chart of the nuclides • Description and use of chart • Data • Radiochemistry introduction • Atomic properties • Nuclear nomenclature • X-rays • Types of decays • Forces

  2. RDCH 702: Introduction • Outcomes for RDCH 702 • Understand chemical properties in radiation and radiochemistry • Use and application of chemical kinetics and thermodynamics to evaluate radionuclide speciation • Understand the influence of radiolysis on the chemistry of radioisotopes • Understand and evaluate radioisotope production • Evaluate and compare radiochemical separations • Utilization of radioisotope nuclear properties in evaluating chemical behavior • Use and explain the application of radionuclides in research • Discuss and understand ongoing radiochemistry research

  3. Grading • Homework (5 %) • In class quiz at completion of topic • Quizzes (12.5 % each) • Take home quiz • Develop tools for research (spreadsheets) • Presentation (20 %) • Based on recent literature • End of semester • 20-25 minutes • Classroom participation (12.5 %) • Bring chart of the nuclides! • Class developed to assist and compliment research activities

  4. Schedule

  5. Schedule

  6. Chart of the Nuclides • Presentation of data on nuclides • Information on chemical element • Nuclide information • Spin and parity (0+ for even-even nuclides) • Fission yield • Stable isotope • Isotopic abundance • Reaction cross sections • Mass • Radioactive isotope • Half-life • Modes of decay and energies • Beta disintegration energies • Isomeric states • Natural decay series • Reaction cross sections

  7. Chart of Nuclides • Decay modes • Alpha • Beta • Positron • Photon • Electron capture • Isomeric transition • Internal conversion • Spontaneous fission • Cluster decay

  8. Chart of the Nuclides Questions • How many stable isotopes of Ni? • What is the mass and isotopic abundance of 84Sr? • Spin and parity of 201Hg? • Decay modes and decay energies of 212Bi • What are the isotopes in the 235U decay series? • What is the half-life of 176Lu? • What is the half-life of 176Yb • How is 238Pu produced? • How is 239Pu made from 238U • Which actinide isotopes are likely to undergo neutron induced fission? • Which isotopes are likely to undergo alpha decay?

  9. Table of the Isotopes • Detailed information about each isotope • Mass chain decay scheme • mass excess (M-A) • particle separation energy • Populating reactions and decay modes • Gamma data • Transitions, % intensities • Decay levels • Energy, spin, parity, half-life • Structure drawing

  10. Introduction • Radiochemistry • Chemistry of the radioactive isotopes and elements • Utilization of nuclear properties in evaluating and understanding chemistry • Intersection of chart of the nuclides and periodic table • Atom • Z and N in nucleus (10-14 m) • Electron interaction with nucleus basis of chemical properties (10-10 m) • Electrons can be excited • Higher energy orbitals • Ionization • Binding energy of electron effects ionization • Isotopes • Same Z different N • Isobar • Same A (sum of Z and N) • Isotone • Same N, different Z • Isomer • Nuclide in excited state • 99mTc

  11. Terms and decay modes: Utilization of chart of the nuclides • Identify the isomer, isobars, isotones, and isotopes • 60mCo, 57Co, 97Nb, 58Co, 57Ni, 57Fe, 59Ni, 99mTc • Identify the daughter from the decay of the following isotopes • 210Po • 196Pb • 204Bi • 209Pb • 222At • 212Bi • 208Pb • How is 14C naturally produced • Identify 5 naturally occurring radionuclides with Z<84

  12. X-rays • Electron from a lower level is removed • electrons of the higher levels can come to occupy resulting vacancy • energy is returned to the external medium as electromagnetic radiation • radiation called an X-ray • discovered by Roentgen in 1895 • In studying x-rays radiation emitted by uranium ores Becquerel et. al. (P. and M. Curie) discovered radioactivity in 1896

  13. X-rays • Removal of K shell electrons • Electrons coming from the higher levels will emit photons while falling to this K shell • series of rays (frequency n or wavelength l) are noted as Ka, Kb, Kg • If the removed electrons are from the L shell, noted as La, Lb, Lg • In 1913 Moseley studied these frequencies n, showing that: • where Z is the atomic number and, A and Z0 are constants depending on the observed transition. • K series, Z0 = 1, L series, Z0 = 7.4.

  14. Absorption Spectra • Edge keV A • K 115.6061 0.1072 • L-I 21.7574 0.5698 • L-II 20.9476 0.5919 • L-III 17.1663 0.7223 • M1 5.5480 2.2348 • M2 5.1822 2.3925 • M3 4.3034 2.8811 • M4 3.7276 3.3261 • M5 3.5517 3.4908 • N1 1.4408 8.6052 • N2 1.2726 9.7426 • N3 1.0449 11.8657 U absorption edges and scattering coefficients

  15. Fundamentals of x-rays • X-rays • X-ray wavelengths from 1E-5 angstrom to 100 angstrom • De-acceleration of high energy electrons • Electron transitions from inner orbitals • Bombardment of metal with high energy electrons • Secondary x-ray fluorescence by primary x-rays • Radioactive sources • Synchrotron sources

  16. Types of Decay 1.  decay (occurs among the heavier elements) 2.  decay 3. Positron emission 4. Electron capture 5. Spontaneous fission

  17. Half Lives for the condition: N/No=1/2=e-t N=Noe- t =(ln 2)/t1/2 Rate of decay of 131I as a function of time. http://genchem.chem.wisc.edu/sstutorial/FunChem.htm

  18. Topic review • Types of radioactive decay • Understand and utilize the data presented in the chart of the nuclides • Units for data • Relationships between isotopes • Fission yields • Identify common fission products • Define X-rays • Read introduction to chart of the nuclides

  19. Study Questions • What are the course outcomes? • What are 3 isotones of 137Cs • What are the different types of radioactive decay? • Provide 5 radioelements • Why is Tc naturally radioactive • What are the stable isotopes of Sn? • What is the beta decay energy of 90Sr? • Which has more stable isotopes, Cr or Fe?

  20. Pop Quiz • Provide 10 facts about 129I using the chart of the nuclides

More Related