Whether or not a given isotope is radioactive is a characteristic of that particular isotope. Some isotopes are stable indefinitely, while others are radioactive and decay through a characteristic form of emission. As time passes, less and less of the radioactive isotope will be present, and the level of radioactivity decreases. An interesting and useful aspect of radioactive decay is half-life, which is the amount of time it takes for one-half of a radioactive isotope to decay. The half-life of a specific radioactive isotope is constant; it is unaffected by conditions and is independent of the initial amount of that isotope.
Consider the following example. Suppose we have 100.0 g of tritium (a radioactive isotope of hydrogen). It has a half-life of 12.3 y. After 12.3 y, half of the sample will have decayed from hydrogen-3 to helium-3 by emitting a beta particle, so that only 50.0 g of the original tritium remains. After another 12.3 y—making a total of 24.6 y—another half of the remaining tritium will have decayed, leaving 25.0 g of tritium. After another 12.3 y—now a total of 36.9 y—another half of the remaining tritium will have decayed, leaving 12.5 g. This sequence of events is illustrated in Figure 1.1 “Radioactive Decay”.
Figure 1.1 Radioactive Decay
During each successive half-life, half of the initial amount will radioactively decay.
We can determine the amount of a radioactive isotope remaining after a given number half-lives by using the following expression:
where n is the number of half-lives. This expression works even if the number of half-lives is not a whole number.
Example 3
The half-life of fluorine-20 is 11.0 s. If a sample initially contains 5.00 g of fluorine-20, how much remains after 44.0 s?
Solution
If we compare the time that has passed to the isotope’s half-life, we note that 44.0 s is exactly 4 half-lives, so using the previous expression, n = 4. Substituting and solving results in the following:
Less than one-third of a gram of fluorine-20 remains.
Test Yourself
The half-life of titanium-44 is 60.0 y. A sample of titanium contains 0.600 g of titanium-44. How much remains after 240.0 y?
Answer
0.0375 g
Half-lives of isotopes range from fractions of a microsecond to billions of years. Table 1.1 “Half-Lives of Various Isotopes” lists the half-lives of some isotopes.
Table 1.1 Half-Lives of Various Isotopes
Isotope | Half-Life |
---|---|
3H | 12.3 y |
14C | 5730 y |
40K | 1.26 × 109 y |
51Cr | 27.70 d |
90Sr | 29.1 y |
131I | 8.04 d |
222Rn | 3.823 d |
235U | 7.04 × 108 y |
238U | 4.47 × 109 y |
241Am | 432.7 y |
248Bk | 23.7 h |
260Sg | 4 ms |