Nuclear Chemistry: Decay, Fission, and Fusion

Alpha, beta, gamma — the three classic decay types. Half-life problems, balancing nuclear equations, and the difference between fission (splitting heavy nuclei) and fusion (combining light nuclei). Plus how radioisotopes serve medicine and dating.

8 min TEKS 12A,12B,12C Chemistry

Three classic decay modes

Some nuclei are unstable and spontaneously break down, emitting radiation. The three main types:

TypeSymbolWhat it isChange to parent
Alpha (α)⁴₂HeHelium-4 nucleus (2p + 2n)Mass −4, atomic # −2
Beta (β⁻)⁰₋₁eHigh-speed electronMass same, atomic # +1
Gamma (γ)γHigh-energy photonNo mass or # change

Beta decay mechanism: a neutron converts to a proton + emitted electron (the beta particle). So mass number stays the same (n becomes p, still 1 nucleon), but atomic number increases by 1.

Penetrating power (least to most)

Alpha < Beta < Gamma.

  • Alpha: stopped by paper or skin
  • Beta: stopped by aluminum foil or thick clothing
  • Gamma: requires thick lead or concrete

But — alpha is the MOST DAMAGING if ingested or inhaled, because it deposits all its energy in a small region of tissue. External alpha is harmless; internal alpha is dangerous.

Balancing nuclear equations

Conserve TWO things on both sides:

  • Total mass number (top numbers)
  • Total atomic number (bottom numbers)

Example — uranium-238 alpha decay:

²³⁸₉₂U → ²³⁴₉₀Th + ⁴₂He

Check: mass 238 = 234 + 4 ✓; atomic 92 = 90 + 2 ✓.

Example — carbon-14 beta decay:

¹⁴₆C → ¹⁴₇N + ⁰₋₁e

Check: mass 14 = 14 + 0 ✓; atomic 6 = 7 + (−1) ✓.

Half-life — radioactive decay rate

The half-life is the time required for HALF of a radioactive sample to decay. It is constant for each isotope — independent of temperature, pressure, chemical state, or sample size.

Tracking decay: starting with N atoms, after n half-lives you have

remaining = N × (1/2)ⁿ

Half-lives range enormously:

  • Polonium-214: 164 microseconds
  • Iodine-131: 8 days (used in thyroid medicine)
  • Carbon-14: 5,730 years (used for radiocarbon dating)
  • Uranium-238: 4.5 billion years

Example: A 100 g sample with half-life 10 years. After 30 years (= 3 half-lives), the remaining = 100 × (1/2)³ = 100 × 1/8 = 12.5 g.

Radiometric dating

The constant half-life makes radioactive isotopes useful as clocks. Living organisms exchange carbon with their environment, maintaining a constant ratio of C-14 to C-12. When the organism dies, C-14 starts decaying without replenishment. By measuring the remaining C-14, scientists can estimate how long ago death occurred — useful for organic samples up to ~50,000 years (≈10 half-lives).

For older samples (rocks), longer half-life isotopes are used: potassium-40, uranium-238, rubidium-87.

Fission vs fusion

Fission — a HEAVY nucleus splits into smaller fragments + neutrons + tremendous energy. Used in nuclear power plants and atomic bombs. Common fuel: uranium-235 absorbs a neutron, becomes unstable, splits.

One U-235 fission releases ~200 MeV — about a million times more energy per atom than a typical chemical reaction. The released neutrons can split more U-235, creating a chain reaction. Control rods (boron, cadmium) absorb excess neutrons to keep the reaction stable.

Fusion — LIGHT nuclei (like hydrogen) combine into a heavier one + energy. Powers stars including our Sun (~10⁷ kg of hydrogen fused per second). Fusion releases even more energy per gram than fission, but requires extreme temperatures (millions of Kelvin) to overcome electrostatic repulsion. Hydrogen bombs use fusion; controlled fusion for power is still experimental.

Both fission and fusion release energy because the products have slightly less mass than the reactants — the missing mass is converted to energy by Einstein's E = mc².

Real-world applications

  • Medicine: I-131 (thyroid), Tc-99m (PET scans, bone imaging), Co-60 (cancer radiation therapy)
  • Industry: Smoke detectors (Am-241 alpha source), thickness gauges, food sterilization
  • Power: nuclear reactors using U-235 or Pu-239
  • Dating: C-14 for organic, K-40 and U-238 for rocks

Check yourself

Quick check #1
An atom undergoes alpha decay. The atomic number of the resulting nucleus is:
Quick check #2
A radioactive sample with half-life 10 years starts with 200 g. How much remains after 30 years?

Practice with real CBE questions