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Radioactive decay of Ag to form -> Cd and Pd


Caustic

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I was reading about a neutron capture experiment http://www.dartmouth.edu/~physics/labs/p1/lab4.pdf

Silver was placed in a paraffin block with Americrum (as an alpha source) and Beryllium to produce neutrons. The paraffin was supposed to slow down the neutrons or "thermalize" them so they can be captured.

According to this lab, Ag when bombarded with slow neutrons will capture them and then decay to eaither Cd or Pd depending on the isotope of Ag.

So my question is how long would you have to expose the Ag to the neutrons to convert a majority of it to Cd and Pd? And once converted can these elements be seperated?

 

Basicially i want to know if i can make a valuable element from a cheap one by bombarding it with neutrons.

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haha, maybe i'll try that. thing is i need to make a neutron gun first...which isn't happening. i could probably find a way to get the beryllium, but it could be difficult (and no im not paying $20/gram on unitednuclear) but i have a number of associates who work in labs, some nuclear, some not. problem is i need a good alpha source which could be tricky. plus then i need to make sure the atmosphere this is in is totally inert without the slightest impurity, lest the entire mixture oxidizes rapidly

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"but overly expensive from most sources"

 

I'd say the 20 bucks for 1g they got at UN is a bit over the the top. The 12$ for a 1g pearl or 25$ for a 5g pearl that they got at Metallium Inc. is starting to sound pretty good though.

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I was reading about a neutron capture experiment http://www.dartmouth.edu/~physics/labs/p1/lab4.pdf

Silver was placed in a paraffin block with Americrum (as an alpha source) and Beryllium to produce neutrons. The paraffin was supposed to slow down the neutrons or "thermalize" them so they can be captured.

According to this lab' date=' Ag when bombarded with slow neutrons will capture them and then decay to eaither Cd or Pd depending on the isotope of Ag.

So my question is how long would you have to expose the Ag to the neutrons to convert a majority of it to Cd and Pd? And once converted can these elements be seperated?

 

Basicially i want to know if i can make a valuable element from a cheap one by bombarding it with neutrons.[/quote']

 

If you had a 1 Ci source (which is really, really radioactive) you get 3.7 x 1010 decays per second. And suppose you had a 100% conversion to neutrons (instead of the small solid angle you'd have in reality) in your beam. Assume all of the neutrons are captured by the Ag - none leak out (unlikely), none absorbed by undesired nuclei,and no reduction in cross section as the target nuclei are depleted (which would give you an exponential decrease in reaction rate) To get one gram of your metal will take on the order of 1010-1011 seconds, because Avogadro's number is 6.02 x 1023. There are ~ 3.15 x 107 seconds in a year. So it'll be a while - 300 years under the ideal conditions I described.

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"So it'll be a while - 300 years under the ideal conditions I described."

 

Somehow I thought it was going to take a while. :)) Even with good cyclotrons, creating a gram of, let's say, gold is not an easy task (as I said). Btw swansont, do even physicists in the U.S. still use curies in experiment calculations? Do they even encourage you to use Bq?

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do even physicists in the U.S. still use curies in experiment calculations? Do they even encourage you to use Bq?

 

I used Ci when I was teaching for the Navy. Since then, I've been doing mostly atomic physics, so it really hasn't come up a whole lot. Besides, a Bq is a dps, so it's pretty boring and useless. (it reminds me of a government program, for some reason)

 

 

I did get mixed up with the whole Sievert vs REM thing, but avoided it mainly by staying away from the hot spots when I was at TRIUMF. Zero dose is zero dose, no matter what the scale...

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"Besides, a Bq is a dps, so it's pretty boring and useless."

 

But it impresses people more when you say "freaking 37 gigabecquerels!" than "1 curie". :)

 

"I did get mixed up with the whole Sievert vs REM thing, but avoided it mainly by staying away from the hot spots when I was at TRIUMF. Zero dose is zero dose, no matter what the scale..."

 

You're quite right about that. :) Did you have the simple... err, things that become darker when they get ionized, eventually becoming black and telling you you're not going to do any work around ionizing radiation for a while?

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Those good ol' radiation badges. My dad works at a nuclear power plant, so he has to carry one of those around. I was thinking of taking it while he's asleep and putting it next to my rubidium and potassium samples, as well as my rock of pitchblende. lol. Then I realized that he'd be forced to stay home for a good long while. Suddenly the humor in that joke was lost. heh.

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"Then I realized that he'd be forced to stay home for a good long while."

 

Yeah, here it's a max of 100mSv divided in a period of five years, and 50mSv is the max for one single year. I recall it being quite a similar amount in every country where these levels are even supervised.

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You're quite right about that. :) Did you have the simple... err, things that become darker when they get ionized, eventually becoming black and telling you you're not going to do any work around ionizing radiation for a while?

 

We had a gamma/beta badge and a neutron badge (later combined into one) that we had on whenever we were inside the fence that cordoned off the cyclotron. Those were turned in when you left and swapped out periodically (monthly?) to be read. I never had occasion to see anything turn black, though.

 

When we were running a radioactive beam into our lab, we had the pencil-shaped dosimeters that we could read ourselves, to measure current dose. I also used a digital dosimeter that beeped as it counted each 0.1 mSv when we were running an experiment with a large background.

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