S-50 (Manhattan Project)

S-50 (Manhattan Project)

S-50 was a Manhattan Project production facility in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, that was used to enrich uranium by means of liquid thermal diffusion.

The thermal diffusion process for uranium isotope separation, which had been developed by U.S. Navy scientists, was not one of the uranium enrichment technologies initially selected for use in the Army-led Manhattan Project. However, in June 1944, after reviewing progress of Philip Abelson's experiments on thermal diffusion at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, a team of Manhattan Project experts recommended that a thermal diffusion plant be built to augment production capacity from the electromagnetic separation process then operating at the Y-12 plant in Oak Ridge.

On June 18, 1944, Major General Leslie Groves contracted with the H.K. Ferguson Company of Cleveland, Ohio, to build the S-50 plant. He gave the company just 90 days (half the time optimistically estimated to be necessary) to complete the project, which included installation of 2,142 48-ft-tall copper and nickel diffusion columns. The facility was located adjacent to the K-25 site, where the massive gaseous diffusion plant was under construction. With the help of creative shortcuts, such as using passenger trains to deliver some construction materials, Ferguson met its seemingly impossible deadline. On September 16, 1944, the S-50 enrichment plant began partial operation. Union Carbide was the operating contractor. Steam was obtained from the K-25 powerhouse. Initially, leaks limited production at S-50, but by January 1945 the facility began substantial production of uranium enriched to about 0.85% U-235. As of March 15, 1945, all 21 production "racks" were operating.

In the face of problems with all three enrichment processes, in April 1945 Robert Oppenheimer ordered that all three enrichment processes be run in series. The S-50 thermal diffusion process became the first stage of enrichment, achieving enrichment levels of less than 2% uranium-235. This material was fed to the gaseous diffusion process in the K-25 plant, which produced a product enriched to about 23% U-235. That product was, in turn, fed into the calutrons at Y-12, which boosted the U-235 concentration to about 84%, providing the uranium used in the Little Boy atomic bomb that was dropped over Hiroshima, Japan, on August 6, 1945.

The S-50 facility was completely shut down on September 9, 1945, less than one year after it began operation. In the early post-war years the building was used for military and atomic energy research and development projects, notably including work on the feasibility of nuclear-powered aviation, but it was torn down not long thereafter.

ources

* [http://www.mphpa.org/classic/HISTORY/H-06b5.htm Manhattan Project History: Clinton Engineer Works (Oak Ridge) S-50 Plant] , The Manhattan Project Heritage Preservation Association.
* [http://www.cfo.doe.gov/me70/manhattan/navy_ltd.htm The Navy and Thermal Diffusion] and [http://www.energy.gov/about/gaseousdiffusionbuilding.htm K-25 Gaseous Diffusion Process Building, Oak Ridge, Tennessee] , United States Department of Energy Office of History and Heritage Resources.
* [http://oakridgevisitor.com/history/pdf/Atomic_Heritage_Foundation-k25.pdf Oak Ridge, Tennessee] , The Atomic Heritage Foundation.
* Carey Sublette, [http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/Nwfaq/Nfaq10.html#nfaq10.5 Chronology For The Origin Of Atomic Weapons] , In: "Nuclear Weapons Frequently Asked Questions", Version 2.13: 15 May 1997.
* http://www.usace.army.mil/publications/misc/un20/c-20.pdf


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Manhattan Project (song) — Manhattan Project Single by Rush from the album Power Windows Released October, 1985 Recorded 1985 Genre …   Wikipedia

  • MANHATTAN PROJECT — MANHATTAN PROJEC On désigne sous le nom de Manhattan Project le premier programme américain de réalisations scientifique et technique destinées à la fabrication de bombes atomiques à uranium 235 et à plutonium, élaboré par les autorités… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Manhattan Project (album) — Manhattan Project Studio album by Dizzy Reece Released 1978 …   Wikipedia

  • Manhattan Project — prop. n. (U. S. History) A former US agency that was responsible for developing atomic bombs during World War II. [WordNet 1.5] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Manhattan Project — This article is about the atomic bomb project. For other uses, see Manhattan Project (disambiguation). Manhattan District The Manhattan Project created the first nuclear bombs. The Trinity test …   Wikipedia

  • Manhattan-Project — General Leslie R. Groves und Robert Oppenheimer ca. 1942 Erster Atombombentest „Trinity“ 1945 Das Manhattan Engineer District (MED), später abgekürzt als Manhattan Projekt, war die Deckbezeichnung für das …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Manhattan Project — General Leslie R. Groves und Robert Oppenheimer ca. 1942 Erster Atombombentest „Trinity“ 1945 Das Manhattan Engineer District (MED), später abgekürzt als Manhattan Projekt, war die Deckbezeichnung für das …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Manhattan Project — U.S. Hist. the unofficial designation for the U.S. War Department s secret program, organized in 1942, to explore the isolation of radioactive isotopes and the production of an atomic bomb: initial research was conducted at Columbia University in …   Universalium

  • Manhattan Project (disambiguation) — The Manhattan Project was the code name given to the American effort to develop the first nuclear weapons during World War II, with assistance from the United Kingdom and Canada. Manhattan Project can also refer to: The Manhatten Project, an… …   Wikipedia

  • Manhattan Project —   The U.S. Government project that produced the first nuclear weapons during World War II. Started in 1942, the Manhattan Project formally ended in 1946. The Hanford Site, Oak Ridge Reservation, and Los Alamos National Laboratory were created for …   Energy terms

  • Manhattan Project —    The Manhattan Project was the name given to the scheme to develop the atomic bomb in the United States during World War II. Initiated under the Office of Scientific Research and Development in 1942, direction was placed in the hands of General …   Historical Dictionary of the Roosevelt–Truman Era

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”