Question
Question: What is radioactivity? State the law of radioactivity decay. Show that radioactive decay is exponent...
What is radioactivity? State the law of radioactivity decay. Show that radioactive decay is exponential in nature.
The half-life of radium is 1600 years. How much time does 1g of radium take to reduce to 0.125g?
Solution
Radioactivity is a process of spontaneous disintegration or breaking of unstable atomic nucleus by the emission of radiation like α−ray or β−rayor λ−ray. The rate of disintegration will be directly proportional to the amount of substance present at that instant.
For the given problem first calculate the decay constant for the given case. And from that calculate the time required to decay from decay law.
Formula Used:
Half life, T=λ0.693
N=N0e−λt
loga−logb=log(ba)log(ab)=loga+logblogab=blogalogaa=1
Complete step-by-step answer :
The phenomenon by virtue of which substance, spontaneously, disintegrates by emitting certain radiations is called radioactivity.
Laws of Radioactive-decay: Followings are the laws of radioactive decay.
(i) Radioactivity is due to the disintegration of a nucleus.
(ii) Rate of disintegration is not affected by external conditions like temperature and pressure etc. This observation leads us to the conclusion that the seat of radioactivity must be deep inside the atom, i.e., nucleus. Orbital electrons have nothing to do with the phenomenon of radioactivity.
(iii) Law of conservation of charge holds good in radioactivity. It means the total charge before disintegration and that after disintegration must be the same.
(iv) The disintegration is accompanied by the emission of energy in the form of α ,β and γ rays either single or all at a time. Emission of these radioactive radiations bring about following changes:
(a) Emission of α−particle results in a decrease in its atomic number by 2 and a decrease in its atomic weight by 4.
(b) Emission of β−particle results in an increase in atomic number by one while its atomic weight remains unaffected.
(c) Emission of γ−rays results neither in a change of atomic number nor in change of atomic weight.
(v) Each product of disintegration is a new element having physical and chemical properties different from those of the parent atom.
(vi) Rate of disintegration of the radioactive substance, at any instant, is directly proportional to the number of atoms present at that instant. This is known as the statistical law of radioactivity.
Let N be the number of atoms of radioactive samples at any instant. The rate of disintegration will be −dtdN (negative sigh because the number of atoms is decreasing with time). So according to law of radioactive disintegration −dtdNαN, or dtdN=−λN
λ= radioactive decay constant and depends upon nature of substance
Rewriting NdN=−λdt
integrating both sides.
∫NdN=∫−λdt+C⇒logeN=−λt+C
C is a constant of integration that can be determined from initial condition.
At,
t=0,N=N0⇒logeN0=0+C⇒C=logeN0
So,
logeN=−λt+logeN0⇒logeN−logN0=−λt
⇒loge[N0N]=−λt
Or, N=N0e−λt
This gives the number of radioactive substances left at any time. Which is decreasing exponentially.
Half life of a radioactive substance is defined as the time during which the number of atoms of the substance are reduced to half their original value.
So at half life i.e.at t=t21=T,N=2N0
Now above equation becomes
2N0=N0e−λT or , 2=eλT
Taking natural logarithm.