Radioactivity Overview Article
Radioactivity Overview Article
1 in a series of essays on Radioactivity produced by the Royal Society of Chemistry, Radiochemical Methods Group
Discovery of Radioactivity
Ear th has been r adioactive
since it was formed 4500 million years ago. In fact the age
of the earth can be calculated
from a detailed examination of
its radioactivity, par ticularly
the decay of uranium to lead.
Henri Becquerel
Henri Becquerel
The Curies
Rutherford
Measurement
Having identified the various types of radioactivity it was necessary to be able to
measure them.
When uranium and thorium emitted alpha and beta particles they decayed to
different elements, this sequence was
called the natural decay series. By studying the chemistry of the natural decay
series of uranium (U) and thorium (Th)
30 new radioactive elements were discovered, of which radium (Ra) was the best
known. This was a truly international effort, but much of the work was done by
Rutherford and Soddy who both obtained Nobel prizes in Chemistry for this
work. Unravelling this chemistry was
like the work of a detective.
Many of these elements could not be
separated by chemical methods, e.g. radiothorium from Th, Ra from mesothorium and RaD from lead (Pb). Soddy
concluded that such inseparable 11 elements must occupy the same position
in the Periodic Table and called them
isotopes. Isotopes are atoms of the
same nuclear charge but different mass;
that is they contain the same number of
protons (and are the same element) but
different numbers of neutrons.
Geiger-Muller Tube
Rutherfords doctoral thesis at the
Cavendish under J.J. Thompson in 1895
involved studying the effects of x-rays on
gases. This later extended to radioactivity. The work led to a clear understanding of the transport of electricity through
gases by charged ions being attracted to
the electrodes. This production of
charged ions was used for detecting radioactivity in ionization chambers and
Geiger-Muller counters.
Curie Electrometer
The electrometer was used to determine the
presence of radioactivity in solutions and
precipitates. It was used by the Curies to
measure the radioactivity of their solutions
when separating Po and Ra from pitchblende. Electroscopes consist of two light
gold leaves which, when charged, spring
apart. When radioactivity passes through
the electroscope the ionization causes the
charge to leak away and the gold leaves to
collapse together at a rate proportional to
the number of ions produced, which, in
turn, can be related to the amount of radioactivity. Modern versions are often a
metalcoated quartz fibre and are used as
personal dosimeters.
This gave rise to intense interest in experiments in which one nucleus was bombarded with another.
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