Chapter Six: X-Rays
Chapter Six: X-Rays
Chapter Six: X-Rays
In his discovery Roentgen found that the X-ray would pass through the
tissue of humans leaving the bones and metals visible. One of Roentgen’s first
experiments late in 1895 was a film of his wife Bertha's hand with a ring on
her finger. The news of Roentgen’s discovery spread quickly throughout the
world. Scientists everywhere could duplicate his experiment because the
cathode tube was very well known during this period. In early 1896, X-rays
were being utilized clinically in the United States for such things as bone
fractures and gun shot wounds.
The glass tube is evacuated to a pressure of air, of about 100 pascals, recall
that atmospheric pressure is 106 pascals. The anode is a thick metallic target;
it is so made in order to quickly dissipate thermal energy that results from
bombardment with the cathode rays. A high voltage, between 30 to 150 kV, is
applied between the electrodes; this induces an ionization of the residual air,
and thus a beam of electrons from the cathode to the anode ensues. When
these electrons hit the target, they are slowed down, producing the X-rays. The
X-ray photon-generating effect is generally called the Bremsstrahlung effect,
attractive Coulomb force and a much stronger nuclear force. The effect of
both forces on the electron is to slow it down or decelerate it. The electron
leaves the region of sphere of influence of the nucleus with a reduced kinetic
energy and flies off in a different direction, because the vector velocity has
changed. The loss in kinetic energy reappears as an x-ray photon, as
illustrated in Fig.6.2. During deceleration, the electron radiates an X-ray
photon of energy hν = ∆K = K i − K f . The energy lost by incident electrons is
not the same for all electrons and so the x-ray photons emitted are not of the
same wavelength. This process of X-ray photon emission through deceleration
is called Bremsstrahlung and the resulting spectrum is continuous but with a
sharp cut-off wavelength. The minimum wavelength corresponds to an
incident electron losing all of its energy in a single collision and radiating it
away as a single photon.
eV
ν max =
h
hc
λmin =
eV
(ii) Eject tightly bound electrons from the cores of the atoms.
If K-shell (n=1) electrons are removed, electrons from higher energy states
falling into the vacant K-shell states, produce a series of lines denoted as Kα,
Kβ ,... as shown Fig.6.3.
Transitions to the L shell result in the L series and those to the M shell give
rise to the M series, and so on.
Since orbital electrons have definite energy levels, the emitted X-ray photons
also have well defined energies. The emission spectrum has sharp lines
characteristic of the target element.
Not all transitions are allowed. Only those transitions which fulfill the
following selection rule are allowed: ∆λ = ±1 .
2d sinθ = nλ
Where in practice, it is normal to assume first order diffraction so that n = 1.
A given set of atomic planes gives rise a reflection at one angle, seen as a spot
or a ring in a diffraction pattern also called a diffractogram.
The phenomenon is analogous to the atomic line spectra Seen in the visual
region of the electromagnetic spectrum. Changing the metal or element from
which the target anode in the X-ray tube is made alters the wavelengths at
which the high intensity peaks occur. The most penetrating series in an
element’s characteristic X-ray spectrum is called the K series; the second is
called the L series; the third the M series and so on.
ν = a (N −σ )
where σ called the screening constant.
ν
Moseley formed the opinion
that some physical attribute of
the atom must increase by (a)
regular fixed amount, from one
element to the next, rising
through the periodic table. He
postulated that this could only
be the atom’s nuclear charge.
When an electron, with sufficiently high energy, strikes an atom in the X-ray
tube anode, it ejects an electron from one of the atom’s inner shells, say the K
shell. This leaves an empty slot or hole in this shell. One of the electrons from
an outer shell, corresponding to an energy level En can ‘fall’ into this hole,
releasing an amount of energy, En-E1, equal to the difference between the
energy levels of the two shells; this energy is released as an X-ray photon of
frequency:
En − E1
ν=
h
On the basis of this explanation, the K series results from the filling of holes in
the K shell (n=1), with the K, line corresponding to the hole being filled by an
electron falling from the L shell; the Kβ line to the electron falling from the M
shell, and so on.
Similarly, the L series results from the filling of holes in the L shell (n = 2).
The more electrons there are in an atom, the more series there will be in its
X-ray spectrum and the more lines there will be in each series. An atom’s
electronic energy levels depend on the interaction between its electrons and its
nuclear charge, +Ze, and so, since the atoms of each element carry a
characteristic nuclear charge, each element exhibits a characteristic X-ray
spectrum.
the most intense line in the element’s L-series are given by the formula:
1 1
ν Lα = cR∞ ( Z − 7.4) 2 2
− 2 (6.2)
2 3
Fig. 6.7: The transitions that produce the characteristics X-rays radiations.
Dr. Fouad AttiainMajeed
A ‘hole’ 64
an inner shell of the atom’s electron structure is filled by an electron
that ‘falls’ from a higher energy level; the difference in energy appears as high
energy photon.
Atomic and Molecular physics/Lecture notes presented by Dr. Fouad Attia Majeed/Third year students/College
Babylon..
of education (Ibn Hayyan)/Department of Physics/University of Babylon
On account of the relatively large nuclear charge of the anode metals (Z > 30),
the motion of their innermost electrons is virtually unaffected by the
outermost electrons.
The innermost electrons interact almost exclusively with the nucleus, just
like the electron in the hydrogen atom. Consequently, as in Bohr’s elucidation
of the hydrogen spectrum, the denominators of the fractions in equations (6.1)
and (6.2) denote the principal quantum numbers of the energy levels between
which the electronic transitions have taken place. The screening constant, σ, is
greater in equation (6.2) because the electrons in the L shell are shielded from
the nuclear charge by the innermost electrons in the K shell.
(ii) the minimum potential at which the tube must be operated for this line
to appear.
Calculation: (i) The Kβ line corresponds to a transition from the M shell to the
K shell. It is apparent from (Fig. 6.7) that
ν K β = ν Kα + ν Lα
The atomic number of copper (Cu) is 29 and so from equation (6.1)
1 1
ν Kα = 3.291 × 1015 (29 − 1) 2 2
− 2 = 1.935 × 1018 Hz
1 2
and from equation (6.2)
1 1
ν Lα = 3.291× 1015 (29 − 7.4) 2 2
− 2
= 0.213 × 1018 Hz
2 3
which gives for the frequency of the Kβ line:
ν K β = (1.935 + 0.213) × 1018 = 2.148 × 1018 Hz
(ii) For any of the K lines to appear in the X-ray spectrum, an electron must be
dislodged from the K shell. The binding energy of these electrons can be
estimated by assuming that the conditions under which they orbit the nucleus
are comparable to those of the electron in a hydrogen-type atom, i.e., that they
interact almost exclusively with the nucleus. Substituting Z=29 in the equation
Z2
En = −13.6 2 eV with n=1 (because we are in the K=shell).
n