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Carbon-14

Carbon-14, C-14, 14
C
or radiocarbon, is a radioactive isotope of carbon with an atomic nucleus containing 6 protons and 8 neutrons. Its presence in organic materials is the basis of the radiocarbon dating method pioneered by Willard Libby and colleagues (1949) to date archaeological, geological and hydrogeological samples. Carbon-14 was discovered on February 27, 1940, by Martin Kamen and Sam Ruben at the University of California Radiation Laboratory in Berkeley, California. Its existence had been suggested by Franz Kurie in 1934.[3]

Carbon-14, 14C
General
Symbol14C
Namescarbon-14, 14C, C-14,
radiocarbon
Protons (Z)6
Neutrons (N)8
Nuclide data
Natural abundance1 part per trillion =
Half-life (t1/2)5730±40 years.[1]
Isotope mass14.0032420[2] Da
Spin0+
Decay modes
Decay modeDecay energy (MeV)
Beta0.156476[2]
Isotopes of carbon
Complete table of nuclides

There are three naturally occurring isotopes of carbon on Earth: carbon-12 (12
C
), which makes up 99% of all carbon on Earth; carbon-13 (13
C
), which makes up 1%; and carbon-14 (14
C
), which occurs in trace amounts, making up about 1 or 1.5 atoms per 1012 atoms of carbon in the atmosphere. Carbon-12 and carbon-13 are both stable, while carbon-14 is unstable and has a half-life of 5700±30 years.[4] Carbon-14 has a maximum specific activity of 62.4 mCi/mmol (2.31 GBq/mmol), or 164.9 GBq/g.[5] Carbon-14 decays into nitrogen-14 (14
N
) through beta decay.[6] A gram of carbon containing 1 atom of carbon-14 per 1012 atoms will emit ~0.2[7] beta particles per second. The primary natural source of carbon-14 on Earth is cosmic ray action on nitrogen in the atmosphere, and it is therefore a cosmogenic nuclide. However, open-air nuclear testing between 1955 and 1980 contributed to this pool.

The different isotopes of carbon do not differ appreciably in their chemical properties. This resemblance is used in chemical and biological research, in a technique called carbon labeling: carbon-14 atoms can be used to replace nonradioactive carbon, in order to trace chemical and biochemical reactions involving carbon atoms from any given organic compound.

Radioactive decay and detection edit

Carbon-14 goes through radioactive beta decay:

14
6
C
14
7
N
+ e +
ν
e
+ 156.5 keV

By emitting an electron and an electron antineutrino, one of the neutrons in the carbon-14 atom decays to a proton and the carbon-14 (half-life of 5,730 ± 40 years[8]) decays into the stable (non-radioactive) isotope nitrogen-14.

As usual with beta decay, almost all the decay energy is carried away by the beta particle and the neutrino. The emitted beta particles have a maximum energy of about 156 keV, while their weighted mean energy is 49 keV.[8] These are relatively low energies; the maximum distance traveled is estimated to be 22 cm in air and 0.27 mm in body tissue. The fraction of the radiation transmitted through the dead skin layer is estimated to be 0.11. Small amounts of carbon-14 are not easily detected by typical Geiger–Müller (G-M) detectors; it is estimated that G-M detectors will not normally detect contamination of less than about 100,000 disintegrations per minute (0.05 µCi). Liquid scintillation counting is the preferred method[9] although more recently, accelerator mass spectrometry has become the method of choice; it counts all the carbon-14 atoms in the sample and not just the few that happen to decay during the measurements; it can therefore be used with much smaller samples (as small as individual plant seeds), and gives results much more quickly. The G-M counting efficiency is estimated to be 3%. The half-distance layer in water is 0.05 mm.[10]

Radiocarbon dating edit

Radiocarbon dating is a radiometric dating method that uses (14
C
) 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[11] during his tenure as a professor at the University of Chicago. Libby estimated that the radioactivity of exchangeable carbon-14 would be about 14 disintegrations per minute (dpm) per gram of pure carbon, and this is still used as the activity of the modern radiocarbon standard.[12][13] In 1960, Libby 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 14
C
in plants and animals when they die approximately equals the level of 14
C
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 14
C
level for the calculation can either be estimated, or else directly compared with known year-by-year data from tree-ring data (dendrochronology) up to 10,000 years ago (using overlapping data from live and dead trees in a given area), or else from cave deposits (speleothems), back to about 45,000 years before the present. A calculation or (more accurately) a direct comparison of carbon-14 levels in a sample, with tree ring or cave-deposit carbon-14 levels of a known age, then gives the wood or animal sample age-since-formation. Radiocarbon is also used to detect disturbance in natural ecosystems; for example, in peatland landscapes, radiocarbon can indicate that carbon which was previously stored in organic soils is being released due to land clearance or climate change.[14][15]

Cosmogenic nuclides are also used as proxy data to characterize cosmic particle and solar activity of the distant past.[16][17]

Origin edit

Natural production in the atmosphere edit

 
1: Formation of carbon-14
2: Decay of carbon-14
3: The "equal" equation is for living organisms, and the unequal one is for dead organisms, in which the C-14 then decays (See 2).

Carbon-14 is produced in the upper 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 (n) participate in the following n-p reaction (p is proton):

14
7
N
+ n → 14
6
C
+ p

The highest rate of carbon-14 production takes place at altitudes of 9 to 15 kilometres (30,000 to 49,000 ft) and at high geomagnetic latitudes.

The rate of 14
C
production can be modelled, yielding values of 16,400[18] or 18,800[19] atoms of 14
C
per second per square meter of the Earth's surface, which agrees with the global carbon budget that can be used to backtrack,[20] but attempts to measure the production time directly in situ were not very successful. Production rates vary because of changes to the cosmic ray flux caused by the heliospheric modulation (solar wind and solar magnetic field), and, of great significance, due to variations in the Earth's magnetic field. Changes in the carbon cycle however can make such effects difficult to isolate and quantify. [20][21] Occasional spikes may occur; for example, there is evidence for an unusually high production rate in AD 774–775,[22] caused by an extreme solar energetic particle event, the strongest such event to have occurred within the last ten millennia.[23][24] Another "extraordinarily large" 14
C
increase (2%) has been associated with a 5480 BC event, which is unlikely to be a solar energetic particle event.[25]

Carbon-14 may also be produced by lightning[26][27] but in amounts negligible, globally, compared to cosmic ray production. Local effects of cloud-ground discharge through sample residues are unclear, but possibly significant.

Other carbon-14 sources edit

Carbon-14 can also be produced by other neutron reactions, including in particular 13
C
(n,γ)14
C
and 17
O
(n,α)14
C
with thermal neutrons, and 15
N
(n,d)14
C
and 16
O
(n,3
He
)14
C
with fast neutrons.[28] The most notable routes for 14
C
production by thermal neutron irradiation of targets (e.g., in a nuclear reactor) are summarized in the table.

Carbon-14 may also be radiogenic (cluster decay of 223
Ra
, 224
Ra
, 226
Ra
). However, this origin is extremely rare.

14
C
production routes[29]
Parent isotope Natural abundance, % Cross section for thermal neutron capture, b Reaction
14
N
99.634 1.81 14
N
(n,p)14
C
13
C
1.103 0.0009 13
C
(n,γ)14
C
17
O
0.0383 0.235 17
O
(n,α)14
C

Formation during nuclear tests edit

 
Atmospheric 14
C
, New Zealand[30] and Austria.[31] The New Zealand curve is representative for the Southern Hemisphere, the Austrian curve is representative for the Northern Hemisphere. Atmospheric nuclear weapon tests almost doubled the concentration of 14
C
in the Northern Hemisphere.[32] The annotated PTBT label is representative of the Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty.

The above-ground nuclear tests that occurred in several countries between 1955 and 1980 (see nuclear test list) 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, as radioactive CO2 was fixed into plant and animal tissue, and dissolved in the oceans.

One side-effect of the change in atmospheric carbon-14 is that this has enabled some options (e.g., bomb-pulse dating[33]) for determining the birth year of an individual, in particular, the amount of carbon-14 in tooth enamel,[34][35] or the carbon-14 concentration in the lens of the eye.[36]

In 2019, Scientific American reported that carbon-14 from nuclear bomb testing has been found in the bodies of aquatic animals found in one of the most inaccessible regions of the earth, the Mariana Trench in the Pacific Ocean.[37]

The concentration of carbon-14 in atmospheric CO2, reported as the ratio of carbon-14 to carbon-12 with respect to a standard, has now (approximately since the year 2022) declined to levels similar to those prior to the above-ground nuclear tests of the 1950s and 1960s.[38][39] Although the extra carbon-14 atoms generated during those nuclear tests have not disappeared from the atmosphere, oceans and biosphere,[40] they are diluted because of the Suess effect.

Emissions from nuclear power plants edit

Carbon-14 is produced in coolant at boiling water reactors (BWRs) and pressurized water reactors (PWRs). It is typically released to the atmosphere in the form of carbon dioxide at BWRs, and methane at PWRs.[41] Best practice for nuclear power plant operator management of carbon-14 includes releasing it at night, when plants are not photosynthesizing.[42] Carbon-14 is also generated inside nuclear fuels (some due to transmutation of oxygen in the uranium oxide, but most significantly from transmutation of nitrogen-14 impurities), and if the spent fuel is sent to nuclear reprocessing then the carbon-14 is released, for example as CO2 during PUREX.[43][44]

Occurrence edit

Dispersion in the environment edit

After production in the upper atmosphere, the carbon-14 atoms react rapidly to form mostly (about 93%) 14
CO
(carbon monoxide), which subsequently oxidizes at a slower rate to form 14
CO
2
, radioactive carbon dioxide. The gas mixes rapidly and becomes evenly distributed throughout the atmosphere (the mixing timescale in the order of weeks). Carbon dioxide also dissolves in water and thus permeates the oceans, but at a slower rate.[21] The atmospheric half-life for removal of 14
CO
2
has been estimated to be roughly 12 to 16 years in the northern hemisphere. The transfer between the ocean shallow layer and the large reservoir of bicarbonates in the ocean depths occurs at a limited rate.[29] In 2009 the activity of 14
C
was 238 Bq per kg carbon of fresh terrestrial biomatter, close to the values before atmospheric nuclear testing (226 Bq/kg C; 1950).[45]

Total inventory edit

The inventory of carbon-14 in Earth's biosphere is about 300 megacuries (11 EBq), of which most is in the oceans.[46] The following inventory of carbon-14 has been given:[47]

  • Global inventory: ~8500 PBq (about 50 t)
    • Atmosphere: 140 PBq (840 kg)
    • Terrestrial materials: the balance
  • From nuclear testing (until 1990): 220 PBq (1.3 t)

In fossil fuels edit

Many human-made chemicals are derived from fossil fuels (such as petroleum or coal) in which 14
C
is greatly depleted because the age of fossils far exceeds the half-life of 14
C
. The relative absence of 14
CO
2
is therefore used to determine the relative contribution (or mixing ratio) of fossil fuel oxidation to the total carbon dioxide in a given region of the Earth's atmosphere.[48]

Dating a specific sample of fossilized carbonaceous material is more complicated. Such deposits often contain trace amounts of carbon-14. These amounts can vary significantly between samples, ranging up to 1% of the ratio found in living organisms, a concentration comparable to an apparent age of 40,000 years.[49] This may indicate possible contamination by small amounts of bacteria, underground sources of radiation causing the 14
N
(n,p)14
C
reaction, direct uranium decay (although reported measured ratios of 14
C
/U in uranium-bearing ores[50] would imply roughly 1 uranium atom for every two carbon atoms in order to cause the 14
C
/12
C
ratio, measured to be on the order of 10−15), or other unknown secondary sources of carbon-14 production. The presence of carbon-14 in the isotopic signature of a sample of carbonaceous material possibly indicates its contamination by biogenic sources or the decay of radioactive material in surrounding geologic strata. In connection with building the Borexino solar neutrino observatory, petroleum feedstock (for synthesizing the primary scintillant) was obtained with low 14
C
content. In the Borexino Counting Test Facility, a 14
C
/12
C
ratio of 1.94×10−18 was determined;[51] probable reactions responsible for varied levels of 14
C
in different petroleum reservoirs, and the lower 14
C
levels in methane, have been discussed by Bonvicini et al.[52]

In the human body edit

Since many sources of human food are ultimately derived from terrestrial plants, the relative concentration of carbon-14 in human bodies is nearly identical to the relative concentration in the atmosphere. The rates of disintegration of potassium-40 and carbon-14 in the normal adult body are comparable (a few thousand disintegrated nuclei per second).[53] The beta decays from external (environmental) radiocarbon contribute approximately 0.01 mSv/year (1 mrem/year) to each person's dose of ionizing radiation.[54] This is small compared to the doses from potassium-40 (0.39 mSv/year) and radon (variable).

Carbon-14 can be used as a radioactive tracer in medicine. In the initial variant of the urea breath test, a diagnostic test for Helicobacter pylori, urea labeled with approximately 37 kBq (1.0 μCi) carbon-14 is fed to a patient (i.e., 37,000 decays per second). 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.[55]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Kamen MD (1985). Radiant Science, Dark Politics: A Memoir of the Nuclear Age. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-04929-1.

External links edit


Lighter:
carbon-13
Carbon-14 is an
isotope of carbon
Heavier:
carbon-15
Decay product of:
boron-14, nitrogen-18
Decay chain
of carbon-14
Decays to:
nitrogen-14

carbon, radiocarbon, redirects, here, scientific, journal, radiocarbon, journal, dating, technique, radiocarbon, dating, radiocarbon, radioactive, isotope, carbon, with, atomic, nucleus, containing, protons, neutrons, presence, organic, materials, basis, radio. Radiocarbon redirects here For the scientific journal see Radiocarbon journal For the dating technique see Radiocarbon dating Carbon 14 C 14 14 C or radiocarbon is a radioactive isotope of carbon with an atomic nucleus containing 6 protons and 8 neutrons Its presence in organic materials is the basis of the radiocarbon dating method pioneered by Willard Libby and colleagues 1949 to date archaeological geological and hydrogeological samples Carbon 14 was discovered on February 27 1940 by Martin Kamen and Sam Ruben at the University of California Radiation Laboratory in Berkeley California Its existence had been suggested by Franz Kurie in 1934 3 Carbon 14 14CGeneralSymbol14CNamescarbon 14 14C C 14 radiocarbonProtons Z 6Neutrons N 8Nuclide dataNatural abundance1 part per trillion 1 10 12 displaystyle 1 10 12 Half life t1 2 5730 40 years 1 Isotope mass14 0032420 2 DaSpin0 Decay modesDecay modeDecay energy MeV Beta0 156476 2 Isotopes of carbon Complete table of nuclidesThere are three naturally occurring isotopes of carbon on Earth carbon 12 12 C which makes up 99 of all carbon on Earth carbon 13 13 C which makes up 1 and carbon 14 14 C which occurs in trace amounts making up about 1 or 1 5 atoms per 1012 atoms of carbon in the atmosphere Carbon 12 and carbon 13 are both stable while carbon 14 is unstable and has a half life of 5700 30 years 4 Carbon 14 has a maximum specific activity of 62 4 mCi mmol 2 31 GBq mmol or 164 9 GBq g 5 Carbon 14 decays into nitrogen 14 14 N through beta decay 6 A gram of carbon containing 1 atom of carbon 14 per 1012 atoms will emit 0 2 7 beta particles per second The primary natural source of carbon 14 on Earth is cosmic ray action on nitrogen in the atmosphere and it is therefore a cosmogenic nuclide However open air nuclear testing between 1955 and 1980 contributed to this pool The different isotopes of carbon do not differ appreciably in their chemical properties This resemblance is used in chemical and biological research in a technique called carbon labeling carbon 14 atoms can be used to replace nonradioactive carbon in order to trace chemical and biochemical reactions involving carbon atoms from any given organic compound Contents 1 Radioactive decay and detection 2 Radiocarbon dating 3 Origin 3 1 Natural production in the atmosphere 3 2 Other carbon 14 sources 3 3 Formation during nuclear tests 3 4 Emissions from nuclear power plants 4 Occurrence 4 1 Dispersion in the environment 4 2 Total inventory 4 3 In fossil fuels 4 4 In the human body 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksRadioactive decay and detection editCarbon 14 goes through radioactive beta decay 146 C 147 N e n e 156 5 keVBy emitting an electron and an electron antineutrino one of the neutrons in the carbon 14 atom decays to a proton and the carbon 14 half life of 5 730 40 years 8 decays into the stable non radioactive isotope nitrogen 14 As usual with beta decay almost all the decay energy is carried away by the beta particle and the neutrino The emitted beta particles have a maximum energy of about 156 keV while their weighted mean energy is 49 keV 8 These are relatively low energies the maximum distance traveled is estimated to be 22 cm in air and 0 27 mm in body tissue The fraction of the radiation transmitted through the dead skin layer is estimated to be 0 11 Small amounts of carbon 14 are not easily detected by typical Geiger Muller G M detectors it is estimated that G M detectors will not normally detect contamination of less than about 100 000 disintegrations per minute 0 05 µCi Liquid scintillation counting is the preferred method 9 although more recently accelerator mass spectrometry has become the method of choice it counts all the carbon 14 atoms in the sample and not just the few that happen to decay during the measurements it can therefore be used with much smaller samples as small as individual plant seeds and gives results much more quickly The G M counting efficiency is estimated to be 3 The half distance layer in water is 0 05 mm 10 Radiocarbon dating editMain article Radiocarbon dating Radiocarbon dating is a radiometric dating method that uses 14 C 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 11 during his tenure as a professor at the University of Chicago Libby estimated that the radioactivity of exchangeable carbon 14 would be about 14 disintegrations per minute dpm per gram of pure carbon and this is still used as the activity of the modern radiocarbon standard 12 13 In 1960 Libby 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 14 C in plants and animals when they die approximately equals the level of 14 C 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 14 C level for the calculation can either be estimated or else directly compared with known year by year data from tree ring data dendrochronology up to 10 000 years ago using overlapping data from live and dead trees in a given area or else from cave deposits speleothems back to about 45 000 years before the present A calculation or more accurately a direct comparison of carbon 14 levels in a sample with tree ring or cave deposit carbon 14 levels of a known age then gives the wood or animal sample age since formation Radiocarbon is also used to detect disturbance in natural ecosystems for example in peatland landscapes radiocarbon can indicate that carbon which was previously stored in organic soils is being released due to land clearance or climate change 14 15 Cosmogenic nuclides are also used as proxy data to characterize cosmic particle and solar activity of the distant past 16 17 Origin editNatural production in the atmosphere edit nbsp 1 Formation of carbon 14 2 Decay of carbon 14 3 The equal equation is for living organisms and the unequal one is for dead organisms in which the C 14 then decays See 2 Carbon 14 is produced in the upper 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 n participate in the following n p reaction p is proton 147 N n 146 C pThe highest rate of carbon 14 production takes place at altitudes of 9 to 15 kilometres 30 000 to 49 000 ft and at high geomagnetic latitudes The rate of 14 C production can be modelled yielding values of 16 400 18 or 18 800 19 atoms of 14 C per second per square meter of the Earth s surface which agrees with the global carbon budget that can be used to backtrack 20 but attempts to measure the production time directly in situ were not very successful Production rates vary because of changes to the cosmic ray flux caused by the heliospheric modulation solar wind and solar magnetic field and of great significance due to variations in the Earth s magnetic field Changes in the carbon cycle however can make such effects difficult to isolate and quantify 20 21 Occasional spikes may occur for example there is evidence for an unusually high production rate in AD 774 775 22 caused by an extreme solar energetic particle event the strongest such event to have occurred within the last ten millennia 23 24 Another extraordinarily large 14 C increase 2 has been associated with a 5480 BC event which is unlikely to be a solar energetic particle event 25 Carbon 14 may also be produced by lightning 26 27 but in amounts negligible globally compared to cosmic ray production Local effects of cloud ground discharge through sample residues are unclear but possibly significant Other carbon 14 sources edit Carbon 14 can also be produced by other neutron reactions including in particular 13 C n g 14 C and 17 O n a 14 C with thermal neutrons and 15 N n d 14 C and 16 O n 3 He 14 C with fast neutrons 28 The most notable routes for 14 C production by thermal neutron irradiation of targets e g in a nuclear reactor are summarized in the table Carbon 14 may also be radiogenic cluster decay of 223 Ra 224 Ra 226 Ra However this origin is extremely rare 14 C production routes 29 Parent isotope Natural abundance Cross section for thermal neutron capture b Reaction14 N 99 634 1 81 14 N n p 14 C13 C 1 103 0 0009 13 C n g 14 C17 O 0 0383 0 235 17 O n a 14 CFormation during nuclear tests edit nbsp Atmospheric 14 C New Zealand 30 and Austria 31 The New Zealand curve is representative for the Southern Hemisphere the Austrian curve is representative for the Northern Hemisphere Atmospheric nuclear weapon tests almost doubled the concentration of 14 C in the Northern Hemisphere 32 The annotated PTBT label is representative of the Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty The above ground nuclear tests that occurred in several countries between 1955 and 1980 see nuclear test list 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 as radioactive CO2 was fixed into plant and animal tissue and dissolved in the oceans One side effect of the change in atmospheric carbon 14 is that this has enabled some options e g bomb pulse dating 33 for determining the birth year of an individual in particular the amount of carbon 14 in tooth enamel 34 35 or the carbon 14 concentration in the lens of the eye 36 In 2019 Scientific American reported that carbon 14 from nuclear bomb testing has been found in the bodies of aquatic animals found in one of the most inaccessible regions of the earth the Mariana Trench in the Pacific Ocean 37 The concentration of carbon 14 in atmospheric CO2 reported as the ratio of carbon 14 to carbon 12 with respect to a standard has now approximately since the year 2022 declined to levels similar to those prior to the above ground nuclear tests of the 1950s and 1960s 38 39 Although the extra carbon 14 atoms generated during those nuclear tests have not disappeared from the atmosphere oceans and biosphere 40 they are diluted because of the Suess effect Emissions from nuclear power plants edit Carbon 14 is produced in coolant at boiling water reactors BWRs and pressurized water reactors PWRs It is typically released to the atmosphere in the form of carbon dioxide at BWRs and methane at PWRs 41 Best practice for nuclear power plant operator management of carbon 14 includes releasing it at night when plants are not photosynthesizing 42 Carbon 14 is also generated inside nuclear fuels some due to transmutation of oxygen in the uranium oxide but most significantly from transmutation of nitrogen 14 impurities and if the spent fuel is sent to nuclear reprocessing then the carbon 14 is released for example as CO2 during PUREX 43 44 Occurrence editDispersion in the environment edit After production in the upper atmosphere the carbon 14 atoms react rapidly to form mostly about 93 14 CO carbon monoxide which subsequently oxidizes at a slower rate to form 14 CO2 radioactive carbon dioxide The gas mixes rapidly and becomes evenly distributed throughout the atmosphere the mixing timescale in the order of weeks Carbon dioxide also dissolves in water and thus permeates the oceans but at a slower rate 21 The atmospheric half life for removal of 14 CO2 has been estimated to be roughly 12 to 16 years in the northern hemisphere The transfer between the ocean shallow layer and the large reservoir of bicarbonates in the ocean depths occurs at a limited rate 29 In 2009 the activity of 14 C was 238 Bq per kg carbon of fresh terrestrial biomatter close to the values before atmospheric nuclear testing 226 Bq kg C 1950 45 Total inventory edit The inventory of carbon 14 in Earth s biosphere is about 300 megacuries 11 EBq of which most is in the oceans 46 The following inventory of carbon 14 has been given 47 Global inventory 8500 PBq about 50 t Atmosphere 140 PBq 840 kg Terrestrial materials the balance From nuclear testing until 1990 220 PBq 1 3 t In fossil fuels edit Main article Suess effect Many human made chemicals are derived from fossil fuels such as petroleum or coal in which 14 C is greatly depleted because the age of fossils far exceeds the half life of 14 C The relative absence of 14 CO2 is therefore used to determine the relative contribution or mixing ratio of fossil fuel oxidation to the total carbon dioxide in a given region of the Earth s atmosphere 48 Dating a specific sample of fossilized carbonaceous material is more complicated Such deposits often contain trace amounts of carbon 14 These amounts can vary significantly between samples ranging up to 1 of the ratio found in living organisms a concentration comparable to an apparent age of 40 000 years 49 This may indicate possible contamination by small amounts of bacteria underground sources of radiation causing the 14 N n p 14 C reaction direct uranium decay although reported measured ratios of 14 C U in uranium bearing ores 50 would imply roughly 1 uranium atom for every two carbon atoms in order to cause the 14 C 12 C ratio measured to be on the order of 10 15 or other unknown secondary sources of carbon 14 production The presence of carbon 14 in the isotopic signature of a sample of carbonaceous material possibly indicates its contamination by biogenic sources or the decay of radioactive material in surrounding geologic strata In connection with building the Borexino solar neutrino observatory petroleum feedstock for synthesizing the primary scintillant was obtained with low 14 C content In the Borexino Counting Test Facility a 14 C 12 C ratio of 1 94 10 18 was determined 51 probable reactions responsible for varied levels of 14 C in different petroleum reservoirs and the lower 14 C levels in methane have been discussed by Bonvicini et al 52 In the human body edit Since many sources of human food are ultimately derived from terrestrial plants the relative concentration of carbon 14 in human bodies is nearly identical to the relative concentration in the atmosphere The rates of disintegration of potassium 40 and carbon 14 in the normal adult body are comparable a few thousand disintegrated nuclei per second 53 The beta decays from external environmental radiocarbon contribute approximately 0 01 mSv year 1 mrem year to each person s dose of ionizing radiation 54 This is small compared to the doses from potassium 40 0 39 mSv year and radon variable Carbon 14 can be used as a radioactive tracer in medicine In the initial variant of the urea breath test a diagnostic test for Helicobacter pylori urea labeled with approximately 37 kBq 1 0 mCi carbon 14 is fed to a patient i e 37 000 decays per second 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 55 See also editCarbon to nitrogen ratio Diamond battery Isotopes of carbon Isotopic labeling Radiocarbon datingReferences edit Carbon 14 Dating Mass amp Half life Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 21 September 2023 a b Waptstra AH Audi G Thibault C AME atomic mass evaluation 2003 Archived from the original on 2008 09 23 Retrieved 2007 06 03 Kamen MD May 1963 Early History of Carbon 14 Discovery of this supremely important tracer was expected in the physical sense but not in the chemical sense Science 140 3567 584 590 Bibcode 1963Sci 140 584K doi 10 1126 science 140 3567 584 PMID 17737092 Godwin H 1962 Half life of radiocarbon Nature 195 4845 984 Bibcode 1962Natur 195 984G doi 10 1038 195984a0 S2CID 27534222 Babin V Taran F Audisio D June 2022 Late Stage Carbon 14 Labeling and Isotope Exchange Emerging Opportunities and Future Challenges JACS Au 2 6 1234 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Radiochemistry and Nuclear Chemistry 3rd ed Butterworth Heinemann ISBN 978 0 7506 7463 8 The Basics 14C and Fossil Fuels NOAA ESRL GMD Education and Outreach Archived from the original on 25 September 2015 Retrieved 9 Dec 2015 All other atmospheric carbon dioxide comes from young sources namely land use changes for example cutting down a forest in order to create a farm and exchange with the ocean and terrestrial biosphere This makes 14C an ideal tracer of carbon dioxide coming from the combustion of fossil fuels Scientists can use 14C measurements to determine the age of carbon dioxide collected in air samples and from this can calculate what proportion of the carbon dioxide in the sample comes from fossil fuels Lowe D 1989 Problems associated with the use of coal as a source of C14 free background material Radiocarbon 31 2 117 120 doi 10 1017 S0033822200044775 Archived from the original on 2013 07 24 Jull AJ Barker D Donahue DJ 1985 Carbon 14 Abundances in Uranium Ores and Possible Spontaneous Exotic Emission from U Series Nuclides Meteoritics 20 676 Bibcode 1985Metic 20 676J Alimonti G Angloher G Arpesella C Balata M Bellini G Benziger J et al 1998 Measurement of the 14C abundance in a low background liquid scintillator Physics Letters B 422 1 4 349 358 Bibcode 1998PhLB 422 349B doi 10 1016 S0370 2693 97 01565 7 Bonvicini G Harris N Paolone V 2003 The chemical history of 14C in deep oilfields arXiv hep ex 0308025 Rowland RE The Radioactivity of the Normal Adult Body rerowland com Archived from the original on 2011 02 05 Ionizing Radiation Exposure of the Population of the United States NCRP Report No 93 National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements 1987 Archived from the original on 2007 07 11 Society of Nuclear Medicine Procedure Guideline for C 14 Urea Breath Test PDF snm org 2001 06 23 Archived from the original PDF on 2007 09 26 Retrieved 2007 07 04 Further reading editKamen MD 1985 Radiant Science Dark Politics A Memoir of the Nuclear Age Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 04929 1 External links editWhat is Carbon Dating Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute Lighter carbon 13 Carbon 14 is an isotope of carbon Heavier carbon 15Decay product of boron 14 nitrogen 18 Decay chain of carbon 14 Decays to nitrogen 14 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carbon 14 amp oldid 1189290683, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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