- Electron capture
Electron capture (sometimes called inverse beta decay) is a
decay mode forisotope s that will occur when there are too manyproton s in the nucleus of anatom and insufficient energy to emit apositron ; however, it continues to be a viable decay mode forradioactive isotopes that can decay bypositron emission . If the energy difference between the parent atom and the daughter atom is less than 1.022MeV , positron emission is forbidden and electron capture is the sole decay mode. For example,Rubidium -83 will decay toKrypton -83 solely by electron capture (the energy difference is about 0.9 MeV).In this case, one of the orbital
electron s, usually from the K or Lelectron shell (K-electron capture, also K-capture, or L-electron capture, L-capture), is captured by a proton in the nucleus, forming aneutron and aneutrino . Since the proton is changed to a neutron, the number of neutrons increases by 1, the number of protons decreases by 1, and theatomic mass number remains unchanged. By changing the number of protons, electron capture transforms thenuclide into a new element. The atom moves into anexcited state with the inner shell missing an electron. When transiting to the ground state, the atom will emit an X-ray photon (a type ofelectromagnetic radiation ) and/orAuger electrons .Reaction Details
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(Note that it is one of the initial atom's own electrons that is captured, not a new, incoming electron as might be suggested by the way the above reactions are written.) Radioactive isotopes which decay by pure electron capture can, in theory, be inhibited from radioactive decay if they are fully
ion ized ("stripped" is sometimes used to describe such ions). It is hypothesized that such elements, if formed by ther-process in explodingsupernova e, are ejected fully ionized and so do not undergo radioactive decay as long as they do not encounter electrons in outer space. Anomalies in elemental distributions are thought to be partly a result of this effect on electron capture.Chemical bonds can also affect the rate of electron capture to a small degree (generally less than 1%) depending on the proximity of electrons to the nucleus. [http://www.nature.com/news/2004/040913/pf/040913-24_pf.html]Around the elements in the middle of the
periodic table , isotopes that are lighter than stable isotopes of the same element tend to decay through electron capture, while isotopes heavier than the stable ones decay by electron emission.Common Examples
Some common radioisotopes that decay by electron capture include:
For a full list, see the
table of nuclides .
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