A certain radioactive material is known to decay at a rate proportional to the amount present. If initially there are 100 milligrams of the material present and if after two years it is observed that 5 percent of the original mass has decayed, find (a) an expression for the mass at any time t and (b) the time necessary for 10 percent of the original mass to have decayed.

Respuesta :

Answer:

A general equation is given below; it takes two t1/2 to decay 10% of the material.

Explanation:

Decay constant, k = [tex]\frac{ln 2}{t_{1/2} }[/tex]

But [tex]ln (\frac{N_{t} }{N_{o} })[/tex] = -kt

Where Nf = final amount

No = initial amount

t = time elapsed

a.)

Initially, 5% of 100mg has decayed:

ln [tex]\frac{95}{100}[/tex] = -k × 2 years

k = -0.051293 ÷ (-2)

=0.0256

The equation for mass at any time t for this material, Nt :

[tex]N_{t} = 95. e^{-0.0256t}[/tex]

b.)

at 10% decay of 100mg,

Nt = 90mg

⇒ [tex]ln (\frac{90}{100})[/tex] = -0.0256 × t

∴ t = 4.108 ≅ 4.1 years (or 2 half lives)