Carbon-14, C-14, C or radiocarbon, is a
radioactive isotope of
carbon
Carbon () is a chemical element; it has chemical symbol, symbol C and atomic number 6. It is nonmetallic and tetravalence, tetravalent—meaning that its atoms are able to form up to four covalent bonds due to its valence shell exhibiting 4 ...
with an
atomic nucleus
The atomic nucleus is the small, dense region consisting of protons and neutrons at the center of an atom, discovered in 1911 by Ernest Rutherford at the Department_of_Physics_and_Astronomy,_University_of_Manchester , University of Manchester ...
containing 6
protons
A proton is a stable subatomic particle, symbol , H+, or 1H+ with a positive electric charge of +1 ''e'' ( elementary charge). Its mass is slightly less than the mass of a neutron and approximately times the mass of an electron (the pro ...
and 8
neutrons. Its presence in organic matter is the basis of the
radiocarbon dating
Radiocarbon dating (also referred to as carbon dating or carbon-14 dating) is a method for Chronological dating, determining the age of an object containing organic material by using the properties of carbon-14, radiocarbon, a radioactive Isotop ...
method pioneered by
Willard Libby and colleagues (1949) to date archaeological, geological and hydrogeological samples. Carbon-14 was discovered on February 27, 1940, by
Martin Kamen and
Sam Ruben at the
University of California Radiation Laboratory in
Berkeley, California
Berkeley ( ) is a city on the eastern shore of San Francisco Bay in northern Alameda County, California, United States. It is named after the 18th-century Anglo-Irish bishop and philosopher George Berkeley. It borders the cities of Oakland, Cali ...
. Its existence had been suggested by
Franz Kurie in 1934.
There are three naturally occurring
isotope
Isotopes are distinct nuclear species (or ''nuclides'') of the same chemical element. They have the same atomic number (number of protons in their Atomic nucleus, nuclei) and position in the periodic table (and hence belong to the same chemica ...
s of carbon on Earth:
carbon-12 (C), which makes up 99% of all carbon on Earth;
carbon-13 (C), which makes up 1%; and carbon-14 (C), which occurs in trace amounts, making up about 1-1.5 atoms per 10 atoms of carbon in the atmosphere. C and C are both stable; C is unstable, with
half-life Half-life is a mathematical and scientific description of exponential or gradual decay.
Half-life, half life or halflife may also refer to:
Film
* Half-Life (film), ''Half-Life'' (film), a 2008 independent film by Jennifer Phang
* ''Half Life: ...
years. Carbon-14 has a specific activity of 62.4 mCi/mmol (2.31 GBq/mmol), or 164.9 GBq/g. Carbon-14 decays into
nitrogen-14 () through
beta decay. A gram of carbon containing 1 atom of carbon-14 per 10 atoms, emits ~0.2 beta (β) particles per second. The primary natural source of carbon-14 on Earth is
cosmic ray
Cosmic rays or astroparticles are high-energy particles or clusters of particles (primarily represented by protons or atomic nuclei) that move through space at nearly the speed of light. They originate from the Sun, from outside of the ...
action on nitrogen in the atmosphere, and it is therefore a
cosmogenic nuclide. However, open-air
nuclear testing between 1955 and 1980 contributed to this pool.
The different isotopes of carbon do not differ appreciably in their chemical properties. This resemblance is used in chemical and biological research, in a technique called
carbon labeling: carbon-14 atoms can be used to replace nonradioactive carbon, in order to trace chemical and biochemical reactions involving carbon atoms from any given organic compound.
Radioactive decay and detection
Carbon-14 undergoes
beta decay:
: → + + + 0.156.5 MeV
By emitting an
electron
The electron (, or in nuclear reactions) is a subatomic particle with a negative one elementary charge, elementary electric charge. It is a fundamental particle that comprises the ordinary matter that makes up the universe, along with up qua ...
and an
electron antineutrino, one of the neutrons in carbon-14 decays to a proton and the carbon-14 (
half-life Half-life is a mathematical and scientific description of exponential or gradual decay.
Half-life, half life or halflife may also refer to:
Film
* Half-Life (film), ''Half-Life'' (film), a 2008 independent film by Jennifer Phang
* ''Half Life: ...
of years) decays into the stable (non-radioactive) isotope
nitrogen-14.
As usual with beta decay, almost all the decay energy is carried away by the beta particle and the neutrino. The emitted beta particles have a maximum energy of about 156 keV, while their weighted mean energy is 49 keV.
These are relatively low energies; the maximum distance traveled is estimated to be 22 cm in air and 0.27 mm in body tissue. The fraction of the radiation transmitted through the
dead skin layer is estimated to be 0.11. Small amounts of carbon-14 are not easily detected by typical
Geiger–Müller (G-M) detectors; it is estimated that G-M detectors will not normally detect contamination of less than about 100,000 decays per minute (0.05 μCi).
Liquid scintillation counting is the preferred method although more recently, accelerator mass spectrometry has become the method of choice; it counts all the carbon-14 atoms in the sample and not just the few that happen to decay during the measurements; it can therefore be used with much smaller samples (as small as individual plant seeds), and gives results much more quickly. The G-M counting efficiency is estimated to be 3%. The half-value layer in water is 0.05 mm.
Radiocarbon dating
Radiocarbon dating is a
radiometric dating
Radiometric dating, radioactive dating or radioisotope dating is a technique which is used to Chronological dating, date materials such as Rock (geology), rocks or carbon, in which trace radioactive impurity, impurities were selectively incorporat ...
method that uses C to determine the age of
carbon
Carbon () is a chemical element; it has chemical symbol, symbol C and atomic number 6. It is nonmetallic and tetravalence, tetravalent—meaning that its atoms are able to form up to four covalent bonds due to its valence shell exhibiting 4 ...
aceous materials up to about 60,000 years old. The technique was developed by
Willard Libby and his colleagues in 1949 during his tenure as a professor at the
University of Chicago
The University of Chicago (UChicago, Chicago, or UChi) is a Private university, private research university in Chicago, Illinois, United States. Its main campus is in the Hyde Park, Chicago, Hyde Park neighborhood on Chicago's South Side, Chic ...
. Libby estimated that the radioactivity of exchangeable C would be about 14 decays per minute (dpm) per gram of carbon, and this is still used as the activity of the ''modern radiocarbon standard''. In 1960, Libby was awarded the
Nobel Prize in chemistry for this work.
One of the frequent uses of the technique is to date organic remains from archaeological sites. Plants
fix atmospheric carbon during photosynthesis, so the level of C in plants and animals when they die, roughly equals the level of C in the atmosphere at that time. However, it thereafter decreases exponentially, so the date of death or fixation can be estimated. The initial C level for the calculation can either be estimated, or else directly compared with known year-by-year data from tree-ring data (
dendrochronology
Dendrochronology (or tree-ring dating) is the scientific method of chronological dating, dating tree rings (also called growth rings) to the exact year they were formed in a tree. As well as dating them, this can give data for dendroclimatology, ...
) up to 10,000 years ago (using overlapping data from live and dead trees in a given area), or else from cave deposits (
speleothems), back to about 45,000 years before present. A calculation or (more accurately) a direct comparison of carbon-14 levels in a sample, with tree ring or cave-deposit C levels of a known age, then gives the wood or animal sample age-since-formation. Radiocarbon is also used to detect disturbance in natural ecosystems; for example, in
peatland landscapes, radiocarbon can indicate that carbon which was previously stored in organic soils is being released due to land clearance or climate change.
Cosmogenic nuclides are also used as
proxy data to characterize cosmic particle and solar activity of the distant past.
Origin
Natural production in the atmosphere

Carbon-14 is produced in the upper
troposphere
The troposphere is the lowest layer of the atmosphere of Earth. It contains 80% of the total mass of the Atmosphere, planetary atmosphere and 99% of the total mass of water vapor and aerosols, and is where most weather phenomena occur. From the ...
and the
stratosphere by
thermal neutrons absorbed by
nitrogen
Nitrogen is a chemical element; it has Symbol (chemistry), symbol N and atomic number 7. Nitrogen is a Nonmetal (chemistry), nonmetal and the lightest member of pnictogen, group 15 of the periodic table, often called the Pnictogen, pnictogens. ...
atoms. When
cosmic ray
Cosmic rays or astroparticles are high-energy particles or clusters of particles (primarily represented by protons or atomic nuclei) that move through space at nearly the speed of light. They originate from the Sun, from outside of the ...
s enter the atmosphere, they undergo various transformations, including the production of
neutron
The neutron is a subatomic particle, symbol or , that has no electric charge, and a mass slightly greater than that of a proton. The Discovery of the neutron, neutron was discovered by James Chadwick in 1932, leading to the discovery of nucle ...
s. The resulting neutrons (n) participate in the following
n-p reaction (p is
proton):
: + n → + p + 0.626 MeV
The highest rate of carbon-14 production takes place at altitudes of and at high
geomagnetic latitudes.
The rate of C production can be modeled, yielding values of 16,400
or 18,800
atoms of per second per square meter of Earth's surface, which agrees with the global
carbon budget that can be used to backtrack,
but attempts to measure the production time directly ''in situ'' were not very successful. Production rates vary because of changes to the cosmic ray flux caused by the heliospheric modulation (solar wind and solar magnetic field), and, of great significance, due to variations in the
Earth's magnetic field
Earth's magnetic field, also known as the geomagnetic field, is the magnetic field that extends from structure of Earth, Earth's interior out into space, where it interacts with the solar wind, a stream of charged particles emanating from ...
. Changes in the
carbon cycle
The carbon cycle is a part of the biogeochemical cycle where carbon is exchanged among the biosphere, pedosphere, geosphere, hydrosphere, and atmosphere of Earth. Other major biogeochemical cycles include the nitrogen cycle and the water cycl ...
however can make such effects difficult to isolate and quantify.
Occasional spikes may occur; for example, there is evidence for
an unusually high production rate in AD 774–775, caused by an extreme
solar energetic particle event, the strongest such event to have occurred within the last ten millennia.
Another "extraordinarily large" C increase (2%) has been associated with a 5480 BC event, which is unlikely to be a solar energetic particle event.
Carbon-14 may also be produced by lightning but in amounts negligible, globally, compared to cosmic ray production. Local effects of cloud-ground discharge through sample residues are unclear, but possibly significant.
Other carbon-14 sources
Carbon-14 can also be produced by other neutron reactions, including in particular
C(n,γ)C and
O(n,α)C with
thermal neutrons, and
N(n,d)C and
O(n,He)C with
fast neutrons. The most notable routes for C production by thermal neutron irradiation of targets (e.g., in a nuclear reactor) are summarized in the table.
Another source of carbon-14 is
cluster decay branches from traces of naturally occurring
isotopes of radium, though this decay mode has a
branching ratio on the order of relative to
alpha decay, so
radiogenic carbon-14 is extremely rare.
Formation during nuclear tests

The above-ground
nuclear tests that occurred in several countries in 1955-1980 (see
List of nuclear tests) dramatically increased the amount of C in the atmosphere and subsequently the biosphere; after the tests ended, the atmospheric concentration of the isotope began to decrease, as radioactive CO was fixed into plant and animal tissue, and dissolved in the oceans.
One side-effect of the change in atmospheric C is that this has enabled some options (e.g.
bomb-pulse dating) for determining the birth year of an individual, in particular, the amount of C in
tooth enamel, or the carbon-14 concentration in the lens of the eye.
In 2019,
Scientific American
''Scientific American'', informally abbreviated ''SciAm'' or sometimes ''SA'', is an American popular science magazine. Many scientists, including Albert Einstein and Nikola Tesla, have contributed articles to it, with more than 150 Nobel Pri ...
reported that carbon-14 from nuclear testing has been found in animals from one of the most inaccessible regions on Earth, the
Mariana Trench
The Mariana Trench is an oceanic trench located in the western Pacific Ocean, about east of the Mariana Islands; it is the deep sea, deepest oceanic trench on Earth. It is crescent-shaped and measures about in length and in width. The maxi ...
in the Pacific Ocean.
The concentration of C in atmospheric CO, reported as the C/C ratio with respect to a standard, has (since about 2022) declined to levels similar to those prior to the above-ground nuclear tests of the 1950s and 1960s. Though the extra C generated by those nuclear tests has not disappeared from the atmosphere, oceans and biosphere, it is diluted due to the
Suess effect.
Emissions from nuclear power plants
Carbon-14 is produced in coolant at
boiling water reactors (BWRs) and
pressurized water reactors (PWRs). It is typically released into the air in the form of
carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide is a chemical compound with the chemical formula . It is made up of molecules that each have one carbon atom covalent bond, covalently double bonded to two oxygen atoms. It is found in a gas state at room temperature and at norma ...
at BWRs, and
methane
Methane ( , ) is a chemical compound with the chemical formula (one carbon atom bonded to four hydrogen atoms). It is a group-14 hydride, the simplest alkane, and the main constituent of natural gas. The abundance of methane on Earth makes ...
at PWRs. Best practice for nuclear power plant operator management of carbon-14 includes releasing it at night, when plants are not
photosynthesizing. Carbon-14 is also generated inside nuclear fuels (some due to transmutation of oxygen in the
uranium oxide, but most significantly from transmutation of nitrogen-14 impurities), and if the spent fuel is sent to
nuclear reprocessing then the C is released, for example as CO during
PUREX.
Occurrence
Dispersion in the environment
After production in the upper atmosphere, the carbon-14 reacts rapidly to form mostly (about 93%) CO (
carbon monoxide
Carbon monoxide (chemical formula CO) is a poisonous, flammable gas that is colorless, odorless, tasteless, and slightly less dense than air. Carbon monoxide consists of one carbon atom and one oxygen atom connected by a triple bond. It is the si ...
), which subsequently oxidizes at a slower rate to form , radioactive
carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide is a chemical compound with the chemical formula . It is made up of molecules that each have one carbon atom covalent bond, covalently double bonded to two oxygen atoms. It is found in a gas state at room temperature and at norma ...
. The gas mixes rapidly and becomes evenly distributed throughout the atmosphere (the mixing timescale on the order of weeks). Carbon dioxide also dissolves in water and thus permeates the
ocean
The ocean is the body of salt water that covers approximately 70.8% of Earth. The ocean is conventionally divided into large bodies of water, which are also referred to as ''oceans'' (the Pacific, Atlantic, Indian Ocean, Indian, Southern Ocean ...
s, but at a slower rate.
The atmospheric half-life for removal of has been estimated at roughly 12 to 16 years in the Northern Hemisphere. The transfer between the ocean shallow layer and the large reservoir of
bicarbonates in the ocean depths occurs at a limited rate.
In 2009 the activity of was 238 Bq per kg carbon of fresh terrestrial biomatter, close to the values before atmospheric nuclear testing (226 Bq/kg C; 1950).
Total inventory
The inventory of carbon-14 in Earth's biosphere is about 300
megacuries (11
E Bq), of which most is in the oceans.
The following inventory of carbon-14 has been given:
* Global inventory: ~8500 PBq (about 50
t)
** Atmosphere: 140 PBq (840 kg)
** Terrestrial materials: the balance
* From nuclear testing (until 1990): 220 PBq (1.3 t)
In fossil fuels
Many human-made chemicals are derived from
fossil fuels (such as
petroleum
Petroleum, also known as crude oil or simply oil, is a naturally occurring, yellowish-black liquid chemical mixture found in geological formations, consisting mainly of hydrocarbons. The term ''petroleum'' refers both to naturally occurring un ...
or
coal
Coal is a combustible black or brownish-black sedimentary rock, formed as rock strata called coal seams. Coal is mostly carbon with variable amounts of other Chemical element, elements, chiefly hydrogen, sulfur, oxygen, and nitrogen.
Coal i ...
) in which C is greatly depleted because the age of fossils far exceeds the half-life of C. The relative absence of is therefore used to determine the relative contribution (or
mixing ratio) of fossil fuel oxidation to the total
carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide is a chemical compound with the chemical formula . It is made up of molecules that each have one carbon atom covalent bond, covalently double bonded to two oxygen atoms. It is found in a gas state at room temperature and at norma ...
in a given region of Earth's
atmosphere
An atmosphere () is a layer of gases that envelop an astronomical object, held in place by the gravity of the object. A planet retains an atmosphere when the gravity is great and the temperature of the atmosphere is low. A stellar atmosph ...
.
Dating a specific sample of fossilized carbonaceous material is more complicated. Such deposits often contain trace amounts of C. These amounts can vary significantly between samples, ranging up to 1% of the ratio found in living organisms (an apparent age of about 40,000 years). This may indicate contamination by small amounts of bacteria, underground sources of radiation causing a N(n,p)C reaction, direct
uranium decay (though reported measured ratios of C/U in uranium-bearing ores would imply roughly 1 uranium atom for every two carbon atoms in order to cause the C/C ratio, measured to be on the order of 10), or other unknown secondary sources of C production. The presence of C in the
isotopic signature of a sample of carbonaceous material possibly indicates its contamination by biogenic sources or the decay of radioactive material in surrounding geologic strata. In connection with building the
Borexino solar neutrino observatory, petroleum feedstock (for synthesizing the primary scintillant) was obtained with low C content. In the Borexino Counting Test Facility, a C/C ratio of 1.94×10 was determined; probable reactions responsible for varied levels of C in different
petroleum reservoirs, and the lower C levels in methane, have been discussed by Bonvicini et al.
In the human body
Since many sources of human food are ultimately derived from terrestrial plants, the relative concentration of C in human bodies is nearly identical to the relative concentration in the atmosphere. The rates of disintegration of
potassium-40 (K) and C in the normal adult body are comparable (a few thousand decays per second). The beta decays from external (environmental) radiocarbon contribute about 0.01
mSv/year (1 mrem/year) to each person's
dose of
ionizing radiation
Ionizing (ionising) radiation, including Radioactive decay, nuclear radiation, consists of subatomic particles or electromagnetic waves that have enough energy per individual photon or particle to ionization, ionize atoms or molecules by detaching ...
. This is small compared to the doses from potassium-40, K (0.39 mSv/year) and
radon (variable depending on where you live).
C can be used as a
radioactive tracer in medicine. In the initial variant of the
urea breath test, a diagnostic test for ''
Helicobacter pylori'', urea labeled with about C is fed to a patient (i.e. 37,000 decays per second). In the event of a ''H. pylori'' infection, the bacterial
urease enzyme breaks down the
urea into
ammonia and radioactively-labeled
carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide is a chemical compound with the chemical formula . It is made up of molecules that each have one carbon atom covalent bond, covalently double bonded to two oxygen atoms. It is found in a gas state at room temperature and at norma ...
, which can be detected by low-level counting of the patient's breath.
See also
*
Carbon-to-nitrogen ratio
*
Diamond battery
*
Isotopes of carbon
Carbon (6C) has 14 known isotopes, from to as well as , of which only and are stable. The longest-lived radioisotope is , with a half-life of years. This is also the only carbon radioisotope found in nature, as trace quantities are formed ...
*
Isotopic labeling
*
Radiocarbon dating
Radiocarbon dating (also referred to as carbon dating or carbon-14 dating) is a method for Chronological dating, determining the age of an object containing organic material by using the properties of carbon-14, radiocarbon, a radioactive Isotop ...
References
Further reading
*
External links
What is Carbon Dating? Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute
{{Isotope sequence
, element=carbon
, lighter=
carbon-13
, heavier=
carbon-15
, before=
boron-14,
nitrogen-18
, after=
nitrogen-14
Isotopes of carbon
Environmental isotopes
Radionuclides used in radiometric dating