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16 February, 02:01

Radioactive isotopes are used as contrast dyes to study soft tissues such as the gastrointestinal tract. The radiocontrast dyes are considered safe because the isotopes have short half-lives and the isotopes coat the GI tract and are not absorbed by normal tissue. If a patient ingests 7.50 mg of barium sulfate, how long until the barium-141 is 99% out of the patient's system if the half-life barium-141 is 18.27 minutes?

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  1. 16 February, 02:17
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    The radioactive decay of the isotopes is an exponential decay.

    In consequence, the half-life law is:

    Remaining amount of isotope = Initial Quantity * [1/2]^n, where n is the number of half-lives that have elapsed.

    => Remaining amount of isotope / initial quantity = [1/2]^n.

    In this case we want that the remaining quantity be 1%.

    So, Remaining amount = 1% * initial quantity

    => Remaining amount / Initial quantity = 0.01

    => 0.01 = [1/2]^n

    => n log (1/2) = log (0.01)

    => n = log (0.01) / log (0.5) = 6.6439 half-lives

    Now, you just must multiply the number of half-lives times the time of a half-life

    => T = 6.6439

    => n = 6.6439 * 18.27 minutes = 121.38 minutes

    Answer: 121.38 minutes
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