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No. Nuclear reactions are not chemical reactions. They involve changes to the nucleus of the atom, such as radioactive decay.
Outer Electrons are not associated with nuclear reactions.
Splitting of atom
The Nucleus
Electrons are the subatomic particles responsible for most chemical behavior (with the notable exception of nuclear chemistry), specifically the outer or valence electron shells.The valence electrons are responsible mainly. But protons are responsible for nuclear reactions.
Nuclear decay involves the contents of the atomic nucleus, the protons and neutrons. Chemical reactions involve the electrons.
No. Nuclear reactions are not chemical reactions. They involve changes to the nucleus of the atom, such as radioactive decay.
Nuclear reactions involve the reaction of nuclei and does not involve transfer of electron as in regular chemical reactions.
Protons are found inside the nucleus of an atom and requires very high energy for nuclear reactions. Chemical reactions generally involve the valence electrons.
No, its chemical.nuclear reactions involve changes in only the configuration of the nucleuschemical reactions involve changes in only the configuration of valence electrons
Chemical reactions are a result of valence electron transfer and/or sharing. Valence electrons are located in the outer-most orbitals of the reactant elements. In a sense, though, you could say protons are also involved in chemical reactions. Although an element will never donate, accept, or share protons in a CHEMICAL reaction, they are part of the determination in an elements reactivity. Reactions that do involve protons are termed "nuclear reactions," and are not chemical reactions. In fact, a lot of the methods used to determine chemical reactions -- such as enthalpy -- cannot even be applied to nuclear reactions. Neutrons, like protons are involved in nuclear reactions, but never in chemical reactions. Hope this helps!
Chemical bonding only involves the outermost level of electrons, valence electrons. The actual reaction takes place far away from the nucleus of the atom where the protons are. There are reactions that involve the protons, though, but they are nuclear reactions, not chemical reactions. They are usually achieved through high-speed collision in labs.
Chemical reactions involve a change in the chemical composition of the reacting substances.
AnswerNuclear reactions involve changes in the nucleus of atoms -- the number of protons and/or neutrons is changed. Chemical reactions do not cause any changes at all in the nucleus. Instead, in a chemical reaction, the electron clouds of atoms are interacting, and all changes are occurring with the electrons that surround the nucleus.
It involves the particles of the nucleus (protons and neutrons), not the electrons.
Outer Electrons are not associated with nuclear reactions.
Transmutation of elements refers to the conversion of one chemical element into another. This occurs in nuclear reactions or through radioactive decay.