the guy Posted November 10, 2009 Share Posted November 10, 2009 since X rays have more energy than UV rays, does that mean that they will cause the same chemical reactions as UV but faster? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DrP Posted November 10, 2009 Share Posted November 10, 2009 Depends upon the wavelength of the bonds you are trying to break to initiate reaction. UV will initiate a reaction if it breaks bonds in one of the reactants, leaving behind a radical that will react. If you hit the system with an x-ray instead, then you might not break your target bonds as they vibrate/break at different frequencies. It coulds pass straight through, or hit different bonds. This leads to a question: Does anyone know if you can get a different reaction occuring by hitting the same system with different radiation? i.e. the UV breaking one type of bond, leading to reaction A. Then x-rays, microwaves or some other type of radiation hitting the same starting system, breaking different bonds, leading to a reaction B with different products? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
insane_alien Posted November 10, 2009 Share Posted November 10, 2009 yes it would be possible to change the reaction occuring by changing the wavelength of light it is irradiated with. although X-Rays are high enough up the energy scale that they're just going to ionize everything rather than merely breaking a bond. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sisyphus Posted November 10, 2009 Share Posted November 10, 2009 X-rays, with their smaller wavelength, slip right through a lot of stuff that would absorb UV. Hence, X-ray machines. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
insane_alien Posted November 10, 2009 Share Posted November 10, 2009 yes, but i was reffering to when they do eventually hit something. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sisyphus Posted November 10, 2009 Share Posted November 10, 2009 Yeah, I know. I was giving another reason why increasing the frequency won't just speed up the same effects. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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