Nuclear Binding Energy
- Experiments into nuclear structure have found that the total mass of a nucleus is less than the sum of the masses of its constituent nucleons
- This difference in mass is known as the mass defect or mass deficit
- Mass defect is defined as:
The difference between the measured mass of a nucleus and the sum total of the masses of its constituents
- The mass defect Δm of a nucleus can be calculated using:
- Where:
- Z = proton number
- A = nucleon number
- mp = mass of a proton (kg)
- mn = mass of a neutron (kg)
- mtotal = measured mass of the nucleus (kg)
A system of separated nucleons has a greater mass than a system of bound nucleons
- Due to mass-energy equivalence, this decrease in mass implies that energy is released
- Energy and mass are proportional, so, the total energy of a nucleus is less than the sum of the energies of its constituent nucleons
- Binding energy is defined as:
The energy required to break a nucleus into its constituent protons and neutrons
- The formation of a nucleus from a system of isolated protons and neutrons therefore releases energy, making it an exothermic reaction
- This can be calculated using the equation: