madboy1125
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My teacher said that cobalt-60 is no longer being used. Is this true?
Thanks
-Madboy1125
Thanks
-Madboy1125
This.Cobalt-60 is no longer being used for what?
Be careful here though, the syllabus requires you to know about isotopes in medicine and industry. Tc-99m is more of a medical isotope. I'd recommend studying both of the isotopes.From Production of Materials, there's more info for other radioactive isotopes compared to cobalt-60
my info on technetium-99m compared to cobalt-60
How about strontium-90? I like that more but I can always change to cobalt-60Be careful here though, the syllabus requires you to know about isotopes in medicine and industry. Tc-99m is more of a medical isotope. I'd recommend studying both of the isotopes.
"Beta sources are ideal"
You can do strontium-90 if you don't like cobalt-60 for some reason (why don't you like it by the way, it's fantastic! If you have a mental block and forget your medical isotope it has medical uses as well as industrial, and there's so much available information on it). Just absolutely make sure you have a medical isotope AND an industrial isotope.
hahahaha I remember when I decided to type this"Beta sources are ideal"
Ideal for what? You should change that wording and state what it is ideal for. Simply saying it is a balance of not too penetrating and penetrating a certain amount does not mean it is ideal for some particular use.
Also the use for Strontium-90 that you have put up is a particular use for thin sheet metals. You can also use Cobalt-60 for thicker sheet metals in terms of that use.
A good thing about using Cobalt-60 for this application is that you can test for thin and thick sheet metals. For example, the thin sheet metals might only just block a tiny amount of beta radiation and let most through, whereas a thick metal will block beta radiation and the gamma rays will go through. So this is why I would prefer to say that Cobalt-60 is the better alternative for Strontium-90 in terms of sheet metal manufacturing.
Another industrial use is checking leaks in pipes. I think that can be achieved by Cobalt-60 and Strontium-90 but it just depends on the specifics in the end as to which one is better to use.
for some reason cobalt-60 from where I got my info usually had medical usesYou can do strontium-90 if you don't like cobalt-60 for some reason (why don't you like it by the way, it's fantastic! If you have a mental block and forget your medical isotope it has medical uses as well as industrial, and there's so much available information on it). Just absolutely make sure you have a medical isotope AND an industrial isotope.
It is cool, it's actually really useful. I used it primarily as my industrial isotope, but if I'd forgotten my medical one in an exam, or if cobalt-60 had fit the question better, I could easily have used it instead for a specific question on medical isotopes.for some reason cobalt-60 from where I got my info usually had medical uses
I'll make a cobalt-60 table of its industrial uses. Cool, how it has both medical and industrial uses