How can I calculate the half life of an element?

1 Answer
Dec 30, 2014

Nuclear half-life expresses the time required for half of a sample to undergo radioactive decay. Exponential decay can be expressed mathematically like this:

A(t)=A0(12)tt1/2 (1), where

A(t) - the amount left after t years;
A0 - the initial quantity of the substance that will undergo decay;
t1/2 - the half-life of the decaying quantity.

So, if a problem asks you to calculate an element's half-life, it must provide information about the initial mass, the quantity left after radioactive decay, and the time it took that sample to reach its post-decay value.

Let's say you have a radioactive isotope that undergoes radioactive decay. It started from a mass of 67.0 g and it took 98 years for it to reach 0.01 g. Here's how you would determine its half-life:

Starting from (1), we know that

0.01=67.0(12)98.0t1/20.0167.0=0.000149=(12)98.0t1/2

98.0t1/2=log0.5(0.000149)=12.7

Therefore, its half-life is t1/2=98.012.7=7.72 years.

So, the initial mass gets halved every 7.72 years.

Sometimes, if the numbers allow it, you can work backwards to determine an element's half-life. Let's say you started with 100 g and ended up with 25 g after 1,000 years.

In this case, since 25 represents 1/4th of 100, two hal-life cycles must have passed in 1,000 years, since

100.02=50.0 g after the first t1/2,

50.02=25.0 g after another t1/2.

So, 2t1/2=1000t1/2=10002=500 years.