Question #5e9e6

1 Answer
Jul 19, 2016

"2.25 years"

Explanation:

Your tool of choice here will be the equation

color(blue)(|bar(ul(color(white)(a/a)A_t = A_0 * 1/2^n color(white)(a/a)|)))

Here

A_t - the amount undecayed after a period of time t
A_0 - the initial mass of the radioactive isotope
n - the number of half-lives that pass in a period of time t

In your case, you know that it took 9 years for a sample of a given radioactive isotope to decay from "448 g", the initial mass of the sample, to "28 g", the mass that remains undecayed.

Your goal here will be to use the above equation to find the value of n, the number of half-lives that pass in 9 years. Plug in your values to find

28 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g"))) = 448 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("g"))) * 1/2^n

Rearrange to find

2^n = 448/28 = 16

Since 16 can be written as a power of 2

16 = 2 * 2 * 2 * 2 = 2^4

you will have

2^n = 2^4

This implies that

n = 4

So, you know that it takes 9 years for 4 half-lives to pass, which means that one half-life, t_"1/2", is

t_"1/2" = "9 years"/4 = color(green)(|bar(ul(color(white)(a/a)color(black)("2.25 years")color(white)(a/a)|)))