1 / 10

Radioactive Decay

Radioactive Decay. I can solve half-life problems. Radioisotopes decay in a predictable way The time is takes for half of a sample to decay is called the half life for the isotope. Every radioactive element has a unique half-life C- 14 is 5730 years U-238 is 4.5 billion years

pekelo
Download Presentation

Radioactive Decay

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. Radioactive Decay

  2. I can solve half-life problems. • Radioisotopes decay in a predictable way • The time is takes for half of a sample to decay is called the half life for the isotope. • Every radioactive element has a unique half-life • C-14 is 5730 years • U-238 is 4.5 billion years • I-131 is 8.05 days

  3. I can solve half-life problems • Barium-122 has a half life of 2 minutes. A fresh sample weighing 80 g was obtained. If it takes 10 minutes to set up the experiment using barium-122, how much barium-122 will be left when the experiment begins

  4. I can solve half-life problems How many half-lives have passed when 25% of parent isotope remains? What percent of the parent isotope remains after 5 half-lives? If we started with 200 grams of a radioisotope, how much would be left after 2 half-lives?

  5. I can solve half – life problems What is the half-life of strontium-90? How do you know? How many half-lives have passed when 12.5 grams of Sr-90 remain? How much Sr-90 remains after 8 half-lives?

  6. I can solve half-life problems • Use the formula • The amount remaining is equal to the original amount times 1/2 raised to the # of half-lives that have passed. N=N0(1/2)n • N= amount of remaining radioisotope • N0= original amount of radioisotope sample • n= # of half lives that have passed (time elapsed/half life)

  7. I can solve half-life problems • Barium-122 has a half life of 2 minutes. A fresh sample weighing 80 g was obtained. If it takes 10 minutes to set up the experiment using barium-122, how much barium-122 will be left when the experiment begins • N=N0(1/2)n • N=? • N0=80g • n= time elapsed/half life = 10 days/2 days = 5 • N= 80g (1/2)5 • N=80g (1/2)(1/2)(1/2)(1/2)(1/2) • N= 2.5 grams Barium-122

  8. I can solve half-life problems • Actinium-226 has a half-life of 29 hours. If 100 mg of actinium-226 decays over a period of 58 hours, how much actinium-226 will remain? • N=N0(1/2)n • N=? • N0=100 mg Ac • n= 58 days/29 days= 2 half lives pass • N= 100 mg (1/2)2 • N=25 g Ac

  9. I can solve half-life problems • Iodine-131 is used to destroy thyroid tissue in the treatment of an overactive thyroid. The half-life of iodine-131 is 8 days. If a hospital receives a shipment of 200 g of iodine-131, how much I-131 would remain after 32 days? • N=N0(1/2)n • N=? • N0=200 g I • n= 32 days/8 days= 4 half lives • N= 200g (1/2)4 • N= 12.5 g I

  10. I can solve half-life problems • Mercury -197 is used for kidney scans and has a half-life of 3 days. If the amount of mercury-197 needed for a study is 1.0 gram and the time allowed for shipment is 15 days, how much mercury-197 will need to be ordered? • N=1.0 grams Hg-197 • N0= ? • n=15 days/3 days= 5 half lives • 1.0grams= N0(1/2)5 • N0=32 grams

More Related