Transcript PowerPoint
CHEM 312: Lecture 2
Nuclear Properties
• Readings:
Modern Nuclear Chemistry:
Chapter 2 Nuclear Properties
Nuclear and Radiochemistry:
Chapter 1 Introduction,
Chapter 2 Atomic Nuclei
• Nuclear properties
Masses
Binding energies
Reaction energetics
Q value
Nuclei have shapes
2-1
Nuclear Properties
• Systematic examination of measurable data to determine nuclear
properties
masses
matter distributions
• Size, shape, mass, and relative stability of nuclei follow patterns
that can be understood and interpreted with models
average size and stability of a nucleus described by average
nucleon binding in a macroscopic model
detailed energy levels and decay properties evaluated with a
quantum mechanical or microscopic model
Simple example: Number of stable nuclei based on neutron and proton
number
N
Z
Number
even
even
160
odd
even
53
even
odd
49
odd
odd
4
Simple property dictates nucleus behavior. Number of protons and
neutron important
2-2
Which are the 4 stable odd-odd nuclei?
2-3
Data from Mass
• Evaluation of Mass Excess
• Difference between actual mass of nucleus and expected
mass from atomic number
By definition 12C = 12 amu
If mass excess negative, then isotope has more
binding energy the 12C
• Mass excess==M-A
M is nuclear mass, A is mass number
Unit is MeV (energy)
Convert with E=mc2
• 24Na example
23.990962782 amu
23.990962782-24 = -0.009037218 amu
1 amu = 931.5 MeV
-0.009037218 amu x (931.5 MeV/1 amu)
-8.41817 MeV= Mass excess= for 24Na
2-4
Masses and Q value
• Atomic masses
From nuclei and electrons
• Nuclear mass can be found from atomic mass
m0 is electron rest mass, Be (Z) is the total binding energy of all the
electrons
Be(Z) is small compared to total mass
• Energy (Q) from mass difference between parent and daughter
Mass excess values can be used to find Q (in MeV)
• β- decay Q value
AZA(Z+1)+ + β- +n + Q
Consider β- mass to be part of A(Z+1) atomic mass (neglect
binding)
Q= AZ-A(Z+1)
14C14N+ + β- +n + Q
Energy =Q= mass 14C – mass 14N
* Use Q values
(http://www.nndc.bnl.gov/wallet/wccurrent.html)
2-5
Q=3.0198-2.8634=0.156 MeV
Q value
•
•
Positron Decay
AZA(Z-1)- + β+ +n + Q
Have 2 extra electrons to consider
β+ (positron) and additional atomic electron from Z-1 daughter
* Each electron mass is 0.511 MeV, 1.022 MeV total from the
electrons
Q=AZ – (A(Z-1)- + 1.022) MeV
90Nb90Zr- + β+ +n + Q
Q= 90Nb – ( 90Zr + 1.022) MeV
Q=-82.6632-(-88.7742+1.022) MeV=5.089 MeV
Electron Capture (EC)
Electron comes from parent orbital
Parent can be designated as cation to represent this behavior
AZ+ + e- A(Z-1) + n + Q
Q=AZ – A(Z-1)
207Bi207Pb +n + Q
Q= 207Bi – 207Pb MeV
Q= -20.0553- -22.4527 MeV=2.3947 MeV
2-6
Q value
• Alpha Decay
AZ(A-4)(Z-2) + 4He + Q
241Am237Np + 4He + Q
Use mass excess or Q
value calculator to
determine Q value
Q=241Am-( 237Np+4He)
Q = 52.937-(44.874 + 2.425)
Q = 5.638 MeV
Alpha decay energy for
241Am is 5.48 and 5.44 MeV
2-7
Q value determination
• For a general reaction
Treat Energy (Q) as part of the equation
Solve for Q
• 56Fe+4He59Co+1H+Q
Q= [M56Fe+M4He-(M59Co+M1H)]c2
* M represents mass of isotope
Q=-3.241 MeV (from Q value calculator)
• Mass excess and Q value data can be found in a number
of sources
Table of the Isotopes
Q value calculator
http://www.nndc.bnl.gov/qcalc/
Atomic masses of isotopes
http://physics.nist.gov/cgibin/Compositions/stand_alone.pl
2-8
Q value calculation examples
•
•
Find Q value for the Beta decay of 24Na
24Na24Mg+ +b- + n +Q
Q= 24Na-24Mg
M (24Na)-M(24Mg)
23.990962782-23.985041699
0.005921 amu
* 5.5154 MeV
From mass excess
-8.417 - -13.933
5.516 MeV
Q value for the EC of 22Na
22Na+ + e- 22Ne + n +Q
Q= 22Na - 22Ne
M (22Na)-M(22Ne)
21.994436425-21.991385113
0.003051 amu
2.842297 MeV
From mass excess
-5.181 - -8.024
2.843 MeV
2-9
Terms from Energy
•
Binding energy
Difference between mass of nucleus
and constituent nucleons
Energy released if nucleons
formed nucleus
Nuclear mass not equal to sum of
constituent nucleons
Btot (A,Z)=[ZM(1H)+(A-Z)M(n)-M(A,Z)]c2
•
•
•
•
average binding energy per nucleon
Bave(A,Z)= Btot (A,Z)/A
Some mass converted into energy
that binds nucleus
Measures relative stability
Binding Energy of an even-A nucleus is generally higher than adjacent odd-A
nuclei
Exothermic fusion of H atoms to form He from very large binding energy of
4He
Energy released from fission of the heaviest nuclei is large
Nuclei near the middle of the periodic table have higher binding energies
per nucleon
Maximum in the nuclear stability curve in the iron-nickel region (A~56
through 59)
Responsible for the abnormally high natural abundances of these
2-10
elements
Elements up to Fe formed in stellar fusion
Mass Based Energetics Calculations
• Why does 235U undergo neutron
induced fission for thermal
energies while 238U doesn’t?
• Generalized energy equation
AZ + n A+1Z + Q
• For 235U
Q=(40.914+8.071)-42.441
Q=6.544 MeV
• For 238U
Q=(47.304+8.071)-50.569
Q=4.806 MeV
• For 233U
Q=(36.913+8.071)-38.141
Q=6.843 MeV
• Fission requires around 5-6 MeV
Does 233U from thermal
neutron?
2-11
Binding-Energy Calculation: Development
of simple nuclear model
• Volume of nuclei are nearly proportional to number of nucleons present
Nuclear matter is incompressible
Basis of equation for nuclear radius
• Total binding energies of nuclei are nearly proportional to numbers of
nucleons present
saturation character
Nucleon in a nucleus can apparently interact with only a small
number of other nucleons
Those nucleons on the surface will have different interactions
• Basis of liquid-drop model of nucleus
Considers number of neutrons and protons in nucleus and how they
may arrange
Developed from mass data
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semi-empirical_mass_formula
2-12
Liquid-Drop Binding Energy:
2
2
N -Z
N -Z
2/3
2 -1/ 3
2 -1
EB c1 A1 - k
- c2 A 1 - k
- c3 Z A + c4 Z A +
A
A
• c1=15.677 MeV, c2=18.56 MeV, c3=0.717 MeV, c4=1.211 MeV,
k=1.79 and =11/A1/2
• 1st Term: Volume Energy
dominant term
in first approximation, binding energy is
proportional to the number of nucleons
(N-Z)2/A represents symmetry energy
binding E due to nuclear forces is greatest for
the nucleus with equal numbers of neutrons
and protons
2-13
Liquid drop model
2
2
N -Z
N -Z
2/3
2 -1/ 3
2 -1
EB c1 A1 - k
- c2 A 1 - k
- c3 Z A + c4 Z A +
A
A
• 2nd Term: Surface Energy
Nucleons at surface of nucleus have unsaturated forces
decreasing importance with increasing nuclear size
• 3rd and 4th Terms: Coulomb Energy
3rd term represents the electrostatic energy that arises from the
Coulomb repulsion between the protons
lowers binding energy
4th term represents correction term for charge distribution with diffuse
boundary
• term: Pairing Energy
binding energies for a given A depend on whether N and Z are even or
odd
even-even nuclei, where =11/A1/2, are the most stable
two like particles tend to complete an energy level by pairing opposite
spins
Neutron and proton pairs
2-14
•
Certain values of Z and
N exhibit unusual
stability
2, 8, 20, 28, 50, 82,
and 126
•
Evidence from different
data
masses,
binding energies,
elemental and
isotopic
abundances
Concept of closed shells
in nuclei
Similar to
electron closed
shell
Demonstrates limitation
in liquid drop model
Magic numbers
demonstrated in shell
model
•
•
•
Nuclear
structure and
model lectures
Magic Numbers: Data
comparison
2-15
Mass Parabolas
• Method of
demonstrating
stability for given
mass constructed
from binding energy
Values given in
difference, can
use energy
difference
• For odd A there is
only one b-stable
nuclide
nearest the
minimum of the
parabola
2-16
Friedlander & Kennedy, p.47
Even A mass parabola
• For even A there are usually two or three possible b-stable isobars
Stable nuclei tend to be even-even nuclei
Even number of protons, even number of neutron for
these cases
2-17
Nuclear Shapes: Radii
R=roA1/3
• Nuclear volumes are nearly proportional to nuclear
masses
nuclei have approximately same density
• nuclei are not densely packed with nucleons
Density varies
• ro~1.1 to 1.6 fm for equation above
• Nuclear radii can mean different things
nuclear force field
distribution of charges
nuclear mass distribution
2-18
Nuclear Force Radii
•
•
The radius of the nuclear force field must be less than
the distance of closest approach (do)
d = distance from center of nucleus
T’ = particle’s kinetic energy
T = particle’s initial kinetic energy
do = distance of closest approach in a head on
collision when T’=0
do~10-20 fm for Cu and 30-60 fm for U
2Ze 2
T' T do
2 Ze 2
do
T
2-19
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/rutsca.html#c1
Measurement of Nuclear Radii
• Any positively charged particle can be used to
probe the distance
nuclear (attractive) forces become significant
relative to the Coulombic (repulsive force)
• Neutrons can be used but require high energy
neutrons are not subject to Coulomb forces
high energy needed for de Broglie
wavelengths small compared to nuclear
dimensions
at high energies, nuclei become transparent to
neutrons
Small cross sections
2-20
Electron Scattering
• Using moderate energies of electrons, data is compatible
with nuclei being spheres of uniformly distributed charges
• High energy electrons yield more detailed information about
the charge distribution
no longer uniformly charged spheres
• Radii distinctly smaller than indicated by methods that
determine nuclear force radii
• Re (half-density radius)~1.07 fm
• de (“skin thickness”)~2.4 fm
2-21
Nuclear
potentials
•
•
Scattering experimental
data have has approximate
agreement the Square-Well
potential
Woods-Saxon equation
better fit
Vo
V
1 + e( r - R ) / A
Vo=potential at center
of nucleus
A=constant~0.5 fm
R=distance from
center at which
V=0.5Vo (for halfpotential radii)
or V=0.9Vo and
V=0.1Vo for a dropoff from 90 to 10% of
the full potential
• ro~1.35 to 1.6 fm for SquareWell
• ro~1.25 fm for Woods-Saxon
with half-potential radii,
• ro~2.2 fm for Woods-Saxon with
drop-off from 90 to 10%
• Nuclear skin thickness 2-22
Nuclear Skin
Nucleus Fraction of nucleons in the “skin”
12C
0.90
24Mg
0.79
56Fe
0.65
107Ag
0.55
139Ba
0.51
208Pb
0.46
238U
0.44
(r )
o
[( re - Re ) / ae ]
1+ e
2-23
Spin
• Nuclei possess angular momenta Ih/2
I is an integral or half-integral number known as nuclear
spin
For electrons, generally distinguish between electron
spin and orbital angular momentum
• Protons and neutrons have I=1/2
• Nucleons in nucleus contribute orbital angular momentum
(integral multiple of h/2 ) and their intrinsic spins (1/2)
Protons and neutrons can fill shell (shell model)
Shells have orbital angular momentum like electron
orbitals (s,p,d,f,g,h,i,….)
spin of even-A nucleus is zero or integral
spin of odd-A nucleus is half-integral
• All nuclei of even A and even Z have I=0 in ground state
2-24
Magnetic Moments
• Nuclei with nonzero angular momenta have
magnetic moments
From spin of protons and neutrons
• Bme/Mp is unit of nuclear magnetic moments
nuclear magneton
• Measured magnetic moments tend to differ
from calculated values
Proton and neutron not simple structures
2-25
Methods of measurements
•
Hyperfine structure in atomic spectra
•
Atomic Beam method
Element beam split into 2I+1 components in magnetic field
•
Resonance techniques
•
2I+1 different orientations
Quadrupole Moments: q=(2/5)Z(a2-c2), R2 = (1/2)(a2 + c2)= (roA1/3)2
Data in barns, can solve for a and c
•
Only nuclei with I1/2 have quadrupole moments
Non-spherical nuclei
Interactions of nuclear quadrupole moments with the electric fields produced by electrons in
atoms and molecules give rise to abnormal hyperfine splittings in spectra
•
Methods of measurement: optical spectroscopy, microwave spectroscopy, nuclear resonance
absorption, and modified molecular-beam techniques
2-26
Parity
•
•
•
System wave function sign change if sign of the space coordinates change
system has odd or even parity
Parity is conserved
even+odd=odd, even+even=even, odd+odd=odd
allowed transitions in atoms occur only between an atomic state of
even and one of odd parity
•
Parity is connected with the angular-momentum quantum number l
states with even l have even parity
states with odd l have odd parity
2-27
Topic review
• Understand role of nuclear mass in
reactions
Use mass defect to determine energetics
Binding energies, mass parabola, models
• Determine Q values
• How are nuclear shapes described and
determined
Potentials
Nucleon distribution
• Quantum mechanical terms
Used in description of nucleus
2-28
Study Questions
• What do binding energetics predict about
abundance and energy release?
• Determine and compare the alpha decay Q
values for 2 even and 2 odd Np isotopes.
Compare to a similar set of Pu isotopes.
• What are some descriptions of nuclear shape?
• Construct a mass parabola for A=117 and
A=50
• What is the density of nuclear material?
• Describe nuclear spin, parity, and magnetic
2-29
moment
Question
• Comment in blog
• Respond to PDF Quiz 2
2-30