A patient is given 0.050 mg of technetium-99m, a radioactive isotope with a half-life of about 6.0 hours. How long until the radioactive isotope decays to 6.3 * 10^-3 mg?

1 Answer
Dec 5, 2015

"44 h"

Explanation:

As you know, a radioactive isotope's nuclear half-life tells you exactly how much time must pass in order for an initial sample of this isotope to be halved.

The equation that establishes a relationship between the initial mass of a radioactive isotope, the mass that remains undecayed after a given period of time, and the isotope's half-life looks like this

color(blue)(A = A_0 * 1/2^n)" ", where

A - the initial mass of the sample
A_0 - the mass remaining after a given time
n - the number of half-lives that pass in the given period of time

In your case, the initial amount of technetium-99 is said to be equal to "0.050 mg". You are asked to find the amount of time needed to reduce this initial sample to 6.3 * 10^(-3)"mg".

Use the above equation to find the value of n

6.3 * 10^(-3) color(red)(cancel(color(black)("mg"))) = 0.050 * 10^(-3)color(red)(cancel(color(black)("mg"))) * 1/2^n

This is equivalent to

(6.3 * 10^(-3))/0.050 = 1/2^n

Take the natural log of both sides of the equation to get

ln((6.3 * 10^(-3))/0.050) = ln( (1/2)^n)

ln((6.3 * 10^(-3))/0.050) = n * ln(1/2)

n = ln(1/2)/ln((6.3 * 10^(-3))/0.050) = 7.31

Since n represens the number of half-lives that pass in a given period of time, you can say that

n = t/t_"1/2" implies t = n * t_"1/2"

In your case, t_"1/2" = "6.0 h", which means that

t = 7.31 * "6.0 h" = "43.86 h"

Rounded to two sig figs, the answer will be

t = color(green)("44 h")