bmc
Member
Is radioactive cobalt 60 just formed when Fe59 is bombarded with a neutron and beta decays?
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Are you sure about that.If cobalt is bombarded its proton to neutron ratio will become out of ratio. This would split a neutron into a beta particle and a proton. This would lead to the formation of Ni-60 not cobalt 60Dreamerish*~ said:Cobalt-60 is made by bombarding cobalt-59 with a neutron.
5927Co + 10n → 6027Co
If the n : p ratio wasn't out of ratio, then it wouldn't be radioactive, would it?bmc said:Are you sure about that.If cobalt is bombarded its proton to neutron ratio will become out of ratio. This would split a neutron into a beta particle and a proton. This would lead to the formation of Ni-60 not cobalt 60
No it wouldn't.bmc said:yes well i know that much. can u answer this then. if iron 59 was bombarded with a neutron would it not go to Co-60?
Fe-27? The atomic number of iron is 26, and the atomic mass is around 56.bmc said:but the extra neutron splits into a proton and electron hence Fe-27 results which is then Cobalt. thats y im confused
Why ask if you're already convinced you're right?bmc said:A radioactiuve element is formed by bombarding the element below the desired product with a neutron. therefgore Co-60 is made by bombarding iron qwith a neutron making me right.
i asked for conformation because obviously im not with my teacher 24/7. however after talking to her and working with chemistry contexts 2 i am convinced with what i have said.Dreamerish*~ said:Why ask if you're already convinced you're right?
You give me no choice but to quote from textbooks:
Conquering Chemistry: "For example cobalt-60 which is used for cancer treatment is made by placing normal cobalt-59 in a reactor where it captures a neutron." - Section 3.11, page 78.
Chemistry in Context: "Cobalt-60 is an important medical radioisotope which is produced in three steps. This begins with the bombardment of iron-58 with neutrons to form iron-59, followed by the emission of a β particle to form cobalt-59. This then absorbs a neutron to form cobalt-60." - Section 5.4, page 108.
I'll chuck in a website too: http://www.princeton.edu/~chirata/cobalt.html
Convinced yet?
Okay, if you're confident enough about that.bmc said:i asked for conformation because obviously im not with my teacher 24/7. however after talking to her and working with chemistry contexts 2 i am convinced with what i have said.
In all honesty though thank you for responding
ok thanks very much ive got it now.Dreamerish*~ said:Okay, if you're confident enough about that.
I have Chemistry Contexts 2 and it says on page 108 that the process begins with iron-58, and that the substance from which cobalt-60 is made from is cobalt-59.
Fe-58 is bombarded with a neutron, but it beta decays to give cobalt-59, not 60. To obtain cobalt-60, cobalt-59 is bombarded with a neutron.
What you're talking about is the first step. Usually saying that cobalt-60 is produced by neutron bombardment of cobalt-59 is enough, but if you decide to explain the whole thing, don't forget that neutron bombardment of iron-58 does not directly produce cobalt-60.