Question
Question: After 1 Hour, \(\dfrac{1}{8}\) of the initial mass of a certain radioactive isotope remains undecaye...
After 1 Hour, 81 of the initial mass of a certain radioactive isotope remains undecayed. What is the half-life of the isotope?
Solution
To describe the rate at which the isotope will decay and give off radiation, the half-life of an isotope is used. Using the half-life, the amount of radioactive material that will remain after a specified amount of time can be predicted. Calculate Half time by using the relation of mass.
Formula used:
HalfTime∝ mass1
Complete Step-by-Step solution:
Half the original nuclei will disintegrate during the half-life of that substance. Although changing factors such as temperature, concentration, etc have accelerated or slowed chemical changes, these factors do not have an effect on half-life. Each radioactive isotope, independent of any of these factors, will have its own unique half-life.
HalfTime∝ mass1
HalfTime×mass=k
Let x be 1st half time and 0.5×m be half time mass.
Given that after 1-hour mass = 8M or 0.125M.
⇒x×(0.5M)=1×(0.125M)
x=0.5×M0.125×M
∴x=0.25hr
Or
∴x=15min
The half-life of the isotope is 15min.
Note:
It is important to know about half-lives because it allows you to determine when it is safe to handle a sample of radioactive material. ... They need to be active long enough to treat the condition, but they should also have a half-life that is short enough so that healthy cells and organs are not injured. The half-lives of many radioactive isotopes have been determined and have been found to range from 10 billion years of extremely long half-lives to fractions of a second of extremely short half-lives. For selected elements, the table below illustrates half-lives.