Dictionary Definition
radiochemistry n : the chemistry of radioactive
substances [syn: nuclear
chemistry]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
radiochemistry- the chemistry of radioactive substances
- the use of radioisotopes to study the kinetics of chemical reactions
See also
Extensive Definition
Radiochemistry is the chemistry of radioactive materials, where
radioactive isotopes of
elements are used to study the properties and chemical
reactions of non-radioactive isotopes (often within
radiochemistry the absence of radioactivity leads to a substance
being described as being inactive as the isotopes are stable). Much
of radiochemistry deals with the use of radioactivity to study
ordinary chemical
reactions.
Radiochemistry includes the study of both natural
and man-made radioisotopes.
Main decay modes
All radioisotopes are unstable isotopes of elements—undergo nuclear decay and emit some form of radiation. The radiation emitted can be one of three types, called alpha, beta, or gamma radiation.1. α (alpha)
radiation - the emission of an alpha
particle (which contains 2 protons and 2 neutrons) from an
atomic
nucleus. When this occurs, the atom’s atomic mass
will decrease by 4 units and atomic
number will decrease by 2.
2. β (beta)
radiation - the transmutation of a neutron into an electron and a proton. After this happens, the
electron is emitted from the nucleus into the electron cloud.
3. gamma
radiation - the emission of electromagnetic
energy (such as X-rays) from the
nucleus of an atom. This usually occurs during alpha or beta
radioactive
decay.
These three types of radiation can be
distinguished by their difference in penetrating power.
Alpha can be stopped quite easily by a few
centimetres in air or a piece of paper and is equivalent to a
helium nucleus. Beta can be cut off by an aluminium sheet just a
few millimetres thick and are electrons. Gamma is the most
penetrating of the three and is a massless chargeless high energy
photon. Gamma radiation
requires an appreciable amount of heavy metal radiation
shielding (usually lead
or barium-based) to
reduce its intensity.
Activation analysis
By neutron irradiation of objects it is possible to induce radioactivity, this activation of stable isotopes to create radioisotopes is the basis of neutron activation analysis. One of the most interesting objects which has been studied in this way is the hair of Napoleon's head, which have been examined for their arsenic content.A series of different experimental methods exist,
these have been designed to enable the measurement of a range of
different elements in different matrices. To reduce the effect of
the matrix
it is common to use the chemical extraction of the wanted element
and/or to allow the radioactivity due to the matrix elements to
decay before the measurement of the radioactivity. Since the matrix
effect can be corrected for by observing the decay spectrum, little
or no sample preparation is required for some samples, making
neutron activation analysis less susceptible to
contamination.
The effects of a series of different cooling
times can be seen if a hypothetical sample which contains sodium,
uranium and cobalt in a 100:10:1 ratio was subjected to a very
short pulse of thermal
neutrons. The initial radioactivity would be dominated by the
24Na activity but with increasing time the 239Np and finally the
60Co activity would predominate.
Biochemical uses
One biological application is the study of DNA using radioactive phosphorus-32. In these experiments stable phosphorus is replaced by the chemical identical radioactive P-32, and the resulting radioactivity is used in analysis of the molecules and their behaviour.Another example is the work which was done on the
methylation of elements such as sulfur, selenium, tellurium and polonium by living organisms.
It has been shown that bacteria can convert these
elements into volatile compounds, it is thought that methylcobalamin
(vitamin B12 alkylates these
elements to create the dimethyls. It has been shown that a
combination of Cobaloxime and
inorganic polonium in sterile water forms a volatile
polonium compound, while a control experiment which did not contain
the cobalt compound did
not form the volatile polonium compound. For the sulfur work the isotope 35S was
used, while for polonium 207Po was used. In some related work by
the addition of 57Co to the bacterial culture, followed by
isolation of the cobalamin from the bacteria (and the measurement
of the radioactivity of the isolated cobalamin) it was shown that
the bacteria convert available cobalt into methylcobalamin.
Environmental
Radiochemistry also includes the study of the behaviour of radioisotopes in the environment; for instance, a forest or grass fire can make radioisotopes become mobile again. In these experiments, fires were started in the exclusion zone around Chernobyl and the radioactivity in the air downwind was measured.It is important to note that a vast number of
processes are able to release radioactivity into the environment,
for example the action of cosmic rays on
the air is responsible for the formation of radioisotopes (such as
14C and 32P), the decay of 226Ra forms 222Rn which is a gas which
can diffuse through rocks before entering buildings and dissolve in
water and thus enter drinking
water in addition human activities such as bomb tests,
accidents, and normal releases from industry have resulted in the
release of radioactivity.
Chemical form of the actinides
The environmental chemistry of some radioactive elements such as plutonium is complicated by the fact that solutions of this element can undergo disproportionation and as a result many different oxidation states can coexist at once. Some work has been done on the identification of the oxidation state and coordination number of plutonium and the other actinides under different conditions has been done.http://www.fas.org/sgp/othergov/doe/lanl/pubs/00818043.pdf This includes work on both solutions of relatively simple complexes and work on colloids Two of the key matrixes are soil/rocks and concrete, in these systems the chemical properties of plutonium have been studied using methods such as EXAFS and XANES.http://www.wmsym.org/Abstracts/2002/Proceedings/6b/188.pdfhttp://www.lanl.gov/orgs/nmt/nmtdo/AQarchive/02spring/synchrotron.htmlMovement of colloids
It is important to note that while binding of a metal to the surfaces of the soil particles can prevent its movement through a layer of soil, it is possible for the particles of soil which bear the radioactive metal can migrate as colloidal particles through soil. This has been shown to occur using soil particles labeled with 134Cs, these have been shown to be able to move through cracks in the soil.Normal background
It is important to note that radioactivity is
present everywhere (and has been since the formation of the earth).
According to the
International Atomic Energy Agency, one kilogram of soil
typically contains the following amounts of the following three
natural radioisotopes 370 Bq 40K (typical range 100-700 Bq), 25 Bq
226Ra (typical range 10-50 Bq), 25 Bq 238U (typical range 10-50 Bq)
and 25 Bq 232Th (typical range 7-50 Bq).
Action of microorganisms
The action of micro-organisms can fix uranium;
Thermoanaerobacter
can use chromium(VI),
iron(III), cobalt(III), manganese(IV) and uranium(VI)
as electron acceptors while acetate, glucose, hydrogen, lactate,
pyruvate, succinate, and xylose can act as electron donors
for the metabolism of the bacteria. In this way the metals can be
reduced to form magnetite (Fe3O4), siderite (FeCO3), rhodochrosite (MnCO3), and
uraninite (UO2). Other
researchers have also worked on the fixing of uranium using
bacteriahttp://www.physorg.com/news67270244.htmlhttp://biology.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?request=get-document&doi=10.1371%2Fjournal.pbio.0040282http://www.pnl.gov/news/release.asp?id=175,
Francis R. Livens et al. (Working at Manchester) have
suggested that the reason why Geobacter sulfurreducens can reduce
UO22+ carions to uranium dioxide is that the bacteria reduce the
uranyl cations to UO2+ which then undergoes disproportionation to
form UO22+ and UO2. This reasoning was based (at least in part) on
the observation that NpO2+ is not converted to an insoluble
neptunium oxide by the bacteria.
References
radiochemistry in Arabic: الكيمياء
الإشعاعية
radiochemistry in Bulgarian: Радиационна
химия
radiochemistry in German: Radiochemie
radiochemistry in French: Radiochimie
radiochemistry in Hungarian: Radiokémia
radiochemistry in Dutch: Radiochemie
radiochemistry in Norwegian: Radiokjemi
radiochemistry in Portuguese: Radioquímica
radiochemistry in Russian: Радиохимия
radiochemistry in Serbian: Радиохемија
radiochemistry in Finnish: Radiokemia
radiochemistry in Chinese:
辐射化学