Calculating the Decay Constant of Carbon 14

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SUMMARY

The discussion focuses on calculating the decay constant (λ) of Carbon-14, which has a known half-life of 5730 years. The decay constant is derived using the formula λ = 0.693 / T_half, where T_half is the half-life. The conversation highlights the confusion between decay rate (dN/dt) and decay constant, clarifying that decay constant is a measure of the probability of decay per unit time. The correct calculation yields λ = 1.21 x 10^-4 year^-1.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of radioactive decay principles
  • Familiarity with the concept of half-life
  • Basic knowledge of exponential functions
  • Knowledge of the relationship between decay constant and half-life
NEXT STEPS
  • Study the derivation of the decay constant from half-life in detail
  • Learn about the applications of Carbon-14 dating in archaeology
  • Explore the mathematical properties of exponential decay functions
  • Investigate other radioactive isotopes and their decay constants
USEFUL FOR

Students in physics or chemistry, researchers in radiocarbon dating, and professionals in fields requiring knowledge of radioactive decay processes.

EIRE2003
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Carbon14 has a half life of 5730 yrs. This is the only information i am given.

Caluculate the decay constant of Carbon 14.

This is what I have done.

dN/dt = -lambda(N)

I know the Avogadro Constant is equal to 6x10^23

So i am using 1kg in my formula.

14C = 6 x 10^23 x 1000/14

where do i go from here??
 
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Half life and decay constant are just two ways of expressing the rate of radioactive decay. Half life (T) uses a base of 2:
X = X_0 2^{-\frac{t}{T_{half}}}

Decay constant (λ) uses a base of "e":
X = X_0 e^{-\lambda t}

You can convert from one to the other. Hint: 2 = e^?
 
ok i used dN/dt

which is 0.693 x 6 x 10^23/5730x 360 x 24 x 3600 x 14
which is equal to 3 x 10^28 s^-1

Is that right??
 
Remeber that 1/λ is going to be equal to the mean lifetime of a C-14 particle, your figure gives a mean lifetime of about 3 x 10^-29 seconds, the mean lifetime is always longer than the half-life so the anbswer MUST be wrong.

Use Dr. Al's hints.
 
Avogadro's number is irrelevant.
2 = e^{0.693}
so... \lambda = \frac{0.693}{T_{half}}
 
Ah i don't understand it.
Im looking at an example in a book and it has the second formula he gives,

ie N=No e^-lambda t

therefore dN/dt=-No Lambda e ^-lambda t = - lambda N

When N =12, dN/dt = -lambda 10^12

Now lambda = 0.693 / T1/2
 
decay rate vs. decay constant?

Perhaps you are confusing decay rate (which is dN/dt) with decay constant (which is λ)?
 

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