Mass Defect and Binding Energy
Overview
Mass Defect and Binding Energy explains why the mass of a nucleus is less than the total mass of its separate nucleons, and how this missing mass corresponds to energy.
This topic is central to:
- nuclear stability
- energy released in nuclear reactions
- understanding Nuclear Fission
- understanding Nuclear Fusion
Main hub: Nuclear Physics
Definition
Mass defect is the difference between the total rest mass of the separate nucleons and the actual mass of the bound nucleus. The corresponding energy is the binding energy.
Why It Matters
This idea explains:
- why bound nuclei have lower mass than separate nucleons
- why energy is released in nuclear formation and some nuclear reactions
- why binding energy per nucleon is a good measure of stability
Key Representations
Rest Mass and Nuclear Mass
A nucleus contains:
- protons
- neutrons
If all nucleons were separated and at rest, the total rest mass would be:
where:
- = proton mass
- = neutron mass
However, the actual nucleus has measured mass:
and:
Important note:
- if nuclear masses are used, compare bare nucleon masses with nuclear mass
- if atomic masses of neutral atoms are used, use atomic masses consistently so electron masses cancel appropriately
- in that atomic-mass method, hydrogen-1 atomic mass is typically used instead of bare proton mass
Mass Defect
Mass defect is the difference between the total separated-nucleon mass and the nuclear mass:
Meaning:
- the missing mass has been converted into energy when the nucleus formed
Binding Energy
Binding energy is the minimum energy required to separate a nucleus completely into free nucleons.
Using Einstein’s relation:
So:
Physical meaning:
- larger binding energy means the nucleus is harder to break apart
- strongly bound nuclei are generally more stable
Why Nuclear Mass Is Smaller
When nucleons bind together:
- energy is released to the surroundings
- total system energy decreases
- the mass equivalent of that released energy is lost
Hence:
Binding Energy per Nucleon
where:
Why it matters:
- it compares how tightly each nucleon is bound on average
Important distinction:
- total binding energy = whole nucleus
- binding energy per nucleon = average per nucleon
For stability comparisons, use binding energy per nucleon.
Units and Conversion Ideas
Atomic mass unit:
Nuclear energies are often measured in electronvolts:
Useful conversion:
Therefore, if mass defect is in :
approximately.
Stability Curve Interpretation
Plotting binding energy per nucleon against nucleon number gives:
- rapid rise for light nuclei
- peak near the iron / nickel region
- slow decline for very heavy nuclei
Meaning:
- nuclei near the peak are the most stable
- light nuclei can release energy by fusion
- heavy nuclei can release energy by fission
Why Higher Binding Energy per Nucleon Means Greater Stability
If binding energy per nucleon is high:
- more energy is needed to remove each nucleon
- nucleons are strongly held together
- the nucleus resists breakup better
Thus it is more stable.
Relation to Nuclear Fission
Very heavy nuclei have lower binding energy per nucleon than medium nuclei.
When a heavy nucleus splits:
- products have higher binding energy per nucleon
- total binding energy increases
- energy is released
See Nuclear Fission.
Relation to Nuclear Fusion
Very light nuclei have lower binding energy per nucleon.
When light nuclei combine:
- the product has higher binding energy per nucleon
- total binding energy increases
- energy is released
See Nuclear Fusion.
Worked Example 1: Mass Defect in Symbolic Form
For helium-4:
It contains:
- protons
- neutrons
Mass defect:
Worked Example 2: Convert to Energy
If:
Then:
Worked Example 3: Binding Energy per Nucleon
If total binding energy is for a nucleus with :
Summary
- nuclear mass is less than the sum of nucleon masses
- the difference is mass defect
- missing mass corresponds to binding energy
- greater binding energy per nucleon means greater stability
- fission and fusion release energy because products move toward higher binding energy per nucleon