Isotopes of an element may be radioactive due to an excess of neutrons in the nucleus and/or the nucleus being too heavy
The most stable nuclei have roughly the same number of protons as neutrons
Too many protons in a nucleus means the repulsive force between them is large, causing the neutrons to repel each other
So, a nucleus with an imbalance of protons or neutrons is more likely to decay into several smaller nuclei until stable nuclei are obtained
With roughly the same number of nucleons in each nucleus
An example of this is the isotope of hydrogen–1
H-1 is the stable nucleus of hydrogen with 0 neutrons and 1 proton
H-2 (deuterium) has one more neutron in the nucleus
H-3 (tritium) has 2 neutrons to 1 proton. This is much more unstable than H-1 or H-2
Hydrogen isotopes
A) 0
B) 1
C) 2
If a nucleus is too heavy, this means it has too many protons and neutrons
The forces keeping the protons and neutrons together in the nucleus will be weaker
An example of this is uranium–238
It has a nucleus with 238 protons and neutrons
During nuclear decay, the mass number of the element which it decays into is gradually reduced
This is done through alpha (α) or beta (β) decay
The notation of C-12 for example, means the element 'carbon' with the mass (or nucleon) number of 12.
A nucleus changes to a different element, during α-decay or β-decay
The initial nucleus is often called the parent nucleus
The nucleus of the new element produced is often called the daughter nucleus
The daughter nucleus is a new element because it has a different proton and/or nucleon number than the original parent nucleus
This can be seen on a graph of N (neutron number) against Z (proton number)
For example; when Pu-239 decays by alpha to U-235, it loses 2 protons and 2 neutrons
U (uranium) is a completely different element from Pu (plutonium)
Graph of N against Z for the decay of Pu – 239
α and β-decay affect the nucleus by
increasing its stability
reducing the number of excess neutrons
During alpha decay an alpha particle is emitted from an unstable nucleus
A completely new element is formed in the process
Alpha decay usually happens in large unstable nuclei, causing the overall mass and charge of the nucleus to decrease
A) parent nucleus
B) alpha particle
C) daughter nucleus
An alpha particle is a helium nucleus
It is made of 2 protons and 2 neutrons
When the alpha particle is emitted from the unstable nucleus, the mass number and atomic number of the nucleus changes
The mass number decreases by 4
The atomic number decreases by 2
The charge on the nucleus also decreases by 2
This is because protons have a charge of +1 each
During beta decay, a neutron changes into a proton and an electron
The electron is emitted and the protonremains in the nucleus
A completely new element is formed because the atomic number changes
Beta decay often happens in unstable nuclei that have too many neutrons. The mass number stays the same, but the atomic number increases by one
A beta particle is a high-speed electron
It has a mass number of 0
This is because the electron has a negligible mass, compared to neutrons and protons
Therefore, the mass number of the decaying nucleus remains the same
Electrons have an atomic number of -1
This means that the new nuclei will increase their atomic number by 1 so atomic number is conserved before and after the decay
During gamma decay, a gamma ray is emitted from an unstable nucleus
This process makes the nucleus less energetic but does not change its structure because gamma radiation has no mass or charge
Gamma decay does not affect the mass number or the atomic number of the radioactive nucleus, but it does reduce the energy of the nucleus
Decay equations, use nuclide notation, to show the emission of α-particles, β-particles and γ-radiation
A decay equation is similar to a chemical reaction equation
The particles present before the decay are shown before the arrow
The particles produced in the decay are shown after the arrow
During decay equations, the sum of the mass and atomic numbers before the reaction must be the same as the sum of the mass and atomic numbers after the reaction
All alpha decay equations have the following form for isotopes X and Y:
The following decay equation shows polonium-212 undergoing alpha decay
It forms lead-208 and an alpha particle
An alpha particle can also be written as a helium (He) nucleus
All beta decay equations have the following form for isotopes X and Y:
All gamma decay equations have the following form for isotope X
You are not expected to know the names of the elements produced during radioactive decays, but you do need to be able to calculate the mass and atomic numbers by making sure they are balanced on either side of the reaction