JoVE Logo

Sign In

19.1 : Radioactivity and Nuclear Equations

Nuclear chemistry is the study of reactions that involve changes in nuclear structure. The nucleus of an atom is composed of protons and, except for hydrogen, neutrons. The number of protons in the nucleus is called the atomic number (Z) of the element, and the sum of the number of protons and the number of neutrons is the mass number (A). Atoms with the same atomic number but different mass numbers are isotopes of the same element.

A nuclide of an element has a specific number of protons and neutrons and is in a specific nuclear energy state. The notation for a nuclide is Atomic notation formula; element symbol A, Z, X. , where X is the symbol for the element, A is the mass number, and Z is the atomic number. There are also several shorthand notations for nuclides, many of which omit the atomic number. For example, Carbon-14 isotope symbol; nuclear chemistry; atom notation diagram for educational study.  may be written carbon-14, C-14, or 14C.

If the nuclide is in a temporary excited state, this is typically denoted with an asterisk. If it is in a longer-lived excited state, called a metastable state, this is denoted by adding ‘m’ to the mass number. For example, the isotope technetium-99 exists as ground-state Technetium-99 isotope notation, showing atomic number 43 and mass number 99 for nuclear chemistry studies. and metastable Radioisotope notation 99mTc, element symbol, used in medical imaging studies, nuclear medicine.. If there is more than one metastable state for a given isotope, they are numbered in increasing energy order. For example, the isotope tantalum-180 has five nuclides: ground-state Tantalum isotope notation: 180/73Ta, atomic structure, chemistry formula, scientific diagram. and metastable states Tantalum-180m isotope symbol, illustrating nuclear isomer, relevant for physics research studies. , Tantalum elemental symbol, 180m2 isotope, nuclear chemistry notation. , Tantalum isotope notation 180m3 with atomic number 73; scientific element identification. , and Nuclear isomer notation for tantalum; scientific diagram; isotope study; atomic structure. .

Nuclear reactions are the transformations of one or more nuclides into another, which occur via changes in the atomic numbers, mass numbers, or nuclear energy states of nuclei. To describe a nuclear reaction, we use an equation that identifies the nuclides and particles involved in the reaction. As with chemical reactions, nuclear reactions obey conservation of mass: the sum of the mass numbers of the reactants equals the sum of the mass numbers of the products.

Many different particles or photons can be involved in nuclear reactions. The most common include alpha particles (α or Alpha particle symbol, \(^{4}_{2}\text{He}^{2+}\), representing helium nucleus in nuclear physics. ), which are high-energy helium-4 nuclei; beta particles (β), which include electrons (e− or β−) and positrons (e+ or β+); gamma rays (γ); neutrons (static equilibrium equation; ΣFx=0; algebraic formula; mathematical balance demonstration ); and protons (p+ or Proton symbol \(^{1}\text{H}^+\), atomic number and charge, chemical notation. ).

Some nuclides remain intact indefinitely, or are stable, whereas others spontaneously transform into other nuclides, or are unstable. The spontaneous change of an unstable nuclide into another is radioactive decay. The unstable nuclide is called the parent nuclide, and the nuclide that results from the decay is known as the daughter nuclide. The daughter nuclide may be stable, or it may decay itself.

This text is adapted from Openstax, Chemistry 2e, Section 21.1: Nuclear Structure and Stability and Openstax, Chemistry 2e, Section 21.2: Nuclear Equations.

Additional Sources

IUPAC. Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book"). Compiled by A. D. McNaught and A. Wilkinson. Blackwell Scientific Publications, Oxford (1997). Online version (2019-) created by S. J. Chalk. https://doi.org/10.1351/goldbook. Accessed 2021-01-10

International Atomic Energy Agency, Nuclear Data Section. Live Chart of Nuclides. https://www-nds.iaea.org/relnsd/vcharthtml/VChartHTML.html. Accessed 2021-01-10

Tags

RadioactivityNuclear EquationsAtomNucleusProtonsNeutronsNucleonsNuclideElement SymbolAtomic NumberMass NumberIsotopesEnergy StateGround StateMetastable StatePeriodic TableStable NuclidesRadionuclidesRadioactive DecayDaughter NuclideAlpha Particles

PLAYLIST

Loading...
JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved