Everything about Carbon-14 totally explained
Carbon-14,
14C, or
radiocarbon, is a
radioactive isotope of
carbon discovered on
February 27,
1940, by
Martin Kamen and
Sam Ruben at the
University of California Radiation Laboratory in
Berkeley. Its
nucleus contains 6
protons and 8
neutrons. Its presence in organic materials is the basis of the
radiocarbon dating method to date archaeological, geological, and hydrogeological samples.
There are three naturally occurring isotopes of carbon on Earth: 99% of the carbon is
carbon-12, 1% is
carbon-13, and carbon-14 occurs in trace amounts, for example making up as much as 1
part per trillion (0.0000000001%) of the carbon on the atmosphere. The
half-life of carbon-14 is 5,730±40 years. It decays into
nitrogen-14 through
beta-decay. The activity of the
modern radiocarbon standardis about 14 disintegrations per minute (dpm) per gram carbon .
The
atomic mass of carbon-14 is about 14.003241
amu. The different isotopes of carbon don't differ appreciably in their chemical properties. This is used in chemical research in a technique called
carbon labeling: some carbon-12 atoms of a given compound are replaced with carbon-14 atoms (or some
carbon-13 atoms) in order to trace them along chemical reactions involving the given compound.
Origin and radioactive decay of carbon-14
Carbon-14 is produced in the upper layers of the troposphere and the stratosphere by
thermal neutrons absorbed by
nitrogen atoms. When
cosmic rays enter the atmosphere, they undergo various transformations, including the production of
neutrons. The resulting neutrons (
1n) participate in the following reaction:
» 1n +
14N →
14C +
1H
The highest rate of carbon-14 production takes place at altitudes of 9 to 15
km (30,000 to 50,000
feet) and at high
geomagnetic latitudes, but the carbon-14 readily mixes and becomes evenly distributed throughout the atmosphere and reacts with
oxygen to form radioactive
carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide also dissolves in water and thus permeates the
oceans.
Carbon-14 can also be produced in
ice by
fast neutrons causing
spallation reactions in
oxygen.
Carbon-14 then goes through radioactive
beta decay.
»
By emitting an electron and an
anti-neutrino, carbon-14 (
half life of 5730 years) decays into the stable, non-radioactive isotope
nitrogen-14.
The inventory of carbon-14 in Earth's biosphere is about 300 million
Curies, of which most is in the oceans.
Radiocarbon dating
Radiocarbon dating is a
radiometric dating method that uses (
14C) to determine the age of
carbonaceous materials up to about 60,000 years old. The technique was developed by
Willard Libby and his colleagues in 1949 during his tenure as a professor at the
University of Chicago. Libby estimated that the steady state radioactivity concentration of exchangeable carbon-14 would be about 14 disintegrations per minute (dpm) per gram. In 1960, he was awarded the
Nobel Prize in chemistry for this work. One of the frequent uses of the technique is to date organic remains from archaeological sites. Plants fix atmospheric carbon during photosynthesis, so the level of
14C in plants at the time wood is laid down, or in animals at the time they die, equals the level of
14C in the atmosphere at that time. However, it decreases thereafter from radioactive decay, allowing the date of death or fixation to be estimated. The initial
14C level for the calculation can either be estimated, or else directly compared with known year-by-year data from tree-ring data (
dendrochronology) to 10,000 years ago, or from cave deposits (
speleothems), to about 45,000 years of age. A calculation or (more accurately) a direct comparison with tree ring or cave-deposit carbon-14 levels, gives the wood or animal sample age-from-formation. The technique has limitations within the modern industrial era, due to fossil fuel carbon (which has little carbon-14) being released into the atmosphere in large quantities, in the past several centuries.
Carbon-14 and fossil fuels
Most man-made chemicals are made of
fossil fuels, such as
petroleum or
coal, in which the carbon-14 has long since decayed. However, oil deposits often contain trace amounts of carbon-14 (varying significantly, but ranging from 1% the ratio found in living organisms to amounts comparable to an apparent age of 40,000 years for oils with the highest levels of carbon-14). This may indicate possible contamination by small amounts of bacteria, underground sources of radiation (such as uranium decay, although reported measured amounts of
14C/U in uranium-bearing ores imply an unlikely (improbably large) quantity of uranium involved, roughly half as much as the carbon in the deposits, to match the 10
-15 14C/C measured), or other unknown secondary sources of carbon-14 production. Presence of carbon-14 in the
isotopic signature of a sample of carbonaceous material indicates its possible contamination by biogenic sources or the decay of radioactive material in surrounding geologic strata.
Carbon-14 and nuclear tests
The above-ground
nuclear tests that occurred in several countries between 1955 and 1963 dramatically increased the amount of carbon-14 in the atmosphere and subsequently in the biosphere; after the tests ended the atmospheric concentration of the isotope began to decrease.
One side effect of the change in atmospheric carbon-14 is that this enables the determination of the birth year of an individual: the amount of carbon-14 in
tooth enamel is measured with
accelerator mass spectrometry and compared to records of past atmospheric carbon-14 concentrations. Since teeth are formed at a specific age and don't exchange carbon thereafter, this method allows age to be determined to within 1.6 years. This method only works for individuals born after 1943,
and it must be known whether the individual was born in the
Northern or the
Southern Hemisphere.
An alternative dating method relies on the lens of the eye; transparent proteins called "lens crystallines" produced during the first year of life are unchanged afterward, so measuring carbon-14 concentrations there can provide a record of the time of birth. The primary restrictions on the technology are that the person has to have been born after 1950, the lens must be removed while the subject is alive or within three days after death before it decays too much, and the individual can't have subsisted primarily on seafood.
Carbon-14 in the human body
Since essentially all sources of human food are derived from plants, the carbon that comprises our bodies contains carbon-14 at the same concentration as the atmosphere. The beta-decays from this internal radiocarbon contribute approx 1 mrem/year (.01
mSv /year) to each person's
dose of
ionizing radiation. This is small compared to the doses from
potassium-40 (0.39 mSv/year) and
radon (which vary).
Carbon-14 can be used as a
radioactive tracer in medicine. In the
urea breath test, a diagnostic test for
Helicobacter pylori, urea labeled with approx 1 μCi (37
kBq) carbon-14 is fed to a patient. In the event of a
H. pylori infection, the bacterial
urease enzyme breaks down the urea into
ammonia and radioactively-labeled
carbon dioxide, which can be detected by low-level counting of the patient's breath.
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