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Chicago Pile-1

Chicago Pile-1 (CP-1) was the world's first artificial nuclear reactor. On 2 December 1942, the first human-made self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction was initiated in CP-1 during an experiment led by Enrico Fermi. The secret development of the reactor was the first major technical achievement for the Manhattan Project, the Allied effort to create nuclear weapons during World War II. Developed by the Metallurgical Laboratory at the University of Chicago, CP-1 was built under the west viewing stands of the original Stagg Field. Although the project's civilian and military leaders had misgivings about the possibility of a disastrous runaway reaction, they trusted Fermi's safety calculations and decided they could carry out the experiment in a densely populated area. Fermi described the reactor as "a crude pile of black bricks and wooden timbers".[4]

Chicago Pile-1
Reactor conceptResearch reactor
Designed and built byMetallurgical Laboratory
Operational1942 to 1943 (81 years ago) (1943)
StatusDismantled
LocationChicago, Illinois, US
Main parameters of the reactor core
Fuel (fissile material)Natural uranium
Fuel stateSolid (pellets)
Neutron energy spectrumSlow
Primary control methodControl rods
Primary moderatorNuclear graphite (bricks)
Primary coolantNone
Reactor usage
Primary useExperimental
Criticality (date)2 December 1942
Operator/ownerUniversity of Chicago / Manhattan Project
RemarksWorld's first artificial nuclear reactor
Site of the First Self Sustaining Nuclear Reaction
Coordinates41°47′33″N 87°36′4″W / 41.79250°N 87.60111°W / 41.79250; -87.60111
Built1942[2]
NRHP reference No.66000314[1]
Significant dates
Added to NRHP15 October 1966 (66000314)[1]
Designated NHL18 February 1965[2]
Designated CL27 October 1971[3]

After a series of attempts, the successful reactor was assembled in November 1942 by a team of about 30 that, in addition to Fermi, included scientists Leo Szilard (who had previously formulated an idea for non-fission chain reaction), Leona Woods, Herbert L. Anderson, Walter Zinn, Martin D. Whitaker, and George Weil. The reactor used natural uranium. This required a very large amount of material in order to reach criticality, along with graphite used as a neutron moderator. The reactor contained 45,000 ultra-pure graphite blocks weighing 360 short tons (330 tonnes) and was fueled by 5.4 short tons (4.9 tonnes) of uranium metal and 45 short tons (41 tonnes) of uranium oxide. Unlike most subsequent nuclear reactors, it had no radiation shielding or cooling system as it operated at very low power – about one-half watt.

The pursuit of a reactor had been touched off by concern that Nazi Germany had a substantial scientific lead. The success of Chicago Pile-1 provided the first vivid demonstration of the feasibility of the military use of nuclear energy by the Allies, as well as the reality of the danger that Nazi Germany could succeed in producing nuclear weapons. Previously, estimates of critical masses had been crude calculations, leading to order-of-magnitude uncertainties about the size of a hypothetical bomb. The successful use of graphite as a moderator paved the way for progress in the Allied effort, whereas the German program languished partly because of the belief that scarce and expensive heavy water would have to be used for that purpose. The Germans had failed to account for the importance of boron and cadmium impurities in the graphite samples on which they ran their test of its usability as a moderator, while Leo Szilard and Enrico Fermi had asked suppliers about the most common contaminations of graphite after a first failed test. They consequently ensured that the next test would be run with graphite entirely devoid of them. As it turned out, both boron and cadmium were strong neutron poisons.

In 1943, CP-1 was moved to Site A, a wartime research facility outside Chicago, where it was reconfigured to become Chicago Pile-2 (CP-2). There, it was operated for research until 1954, when it was dismantled and buried. The stands at Stagg Field were demolished in August 1957; the site is now a National Historic Landmark and a Chicago Landmark.

Origins edit

The idea of a chemical chain reaction was first suggested in 1913 by the German chemist Max Bodenstein for a situation in which two molecules react to form not just the final reaction products, but also some unstable molecules that can further react with the original substances to cause more to react.[5] The concept of a nuclear chain reaction was first hypothesized by the Hungarian scientist Leo Szilard on 12 September 1933.[6] Szilard realized that if a nuclear reaction produced neutrons or dineutrons, which then caused further nuclear reactions, the process might be self-perpetuating. Szilard proposed using mixtures of lighter known isotopes which produced neutrons in copious amounts, and also entertained the possibility of using uranium as a fuel.[7] He filed a patent for his idea of a simple nuclear reactor the following year.[8] The discovery of nuclear fission by German chemists Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann in 1938,[9][10] and its theoretical explanation (and naming) by their collaborators Lise Meitner and Otto Frisch,[11][12] opened up the possibility of creating a nuclear chain reaction with uranium, but initial experiments were unsuccessful.[13][14][15][16]

In order for a chain reaction to occur, fissioning uranium atoms had to emit additional neutrons to keep the reaction going. At Columbia University in New York, Italian physicist Enrico Fermi collaborated with Americans John Dunning, Herbert L. Anderson, Eugene T. Booth, G. Norris Glasoe, and Francis G. Slack to conduct the first nuclear fission experiment in the United States on 25 January 1939.[17][18] Subsequent work confirmed that fast neutrons were indeed produced by fission.[19][20] Szilard obtained permission from the head of the Physics Department at Columbia, George B. Pegram, to use a laboratory for three months, and he persuaded Walter Zinn to become his collaborator.[21] They conducted a simple experiment on the seventh floor of Pupin Hall at Columbia, using a radium-beryllium source to bombard uranium with neutrons. They discovered significant neutron multiplication in natural uranium, proving that a chain reaction might be possible.[22]

Fermi and Szilard still believed that enormous quantities of uranium would be required for an atomic bomb, and therefore concentrated on producing a controlled chain reaction.[23] Fermi urged Alfred O. C. Nier to separate uranium isotopes for determination of the fissile component, and, on 29 February 1940, Nier separated the first uranium-235 sample, which, after being mailed to Dunning at Columbia, was confirmed to be the isolated fissile material.[24] When he was working in Rome, Fermi had discovered that collisions between neutrons and neutron moderators can slow the neutrons down, and thereby make them more likely to be captured by uranium nuclei, causing the uranium to fission.[25][26] Szilard suggested to Fermi that they use carbon in the form of graphite as a moderator. As a back-up plan, he considered heavy water. This contained deuterium, which would not absorb neutrons like ordinary hydrogen, and was a better neutron moderator than carbon; but heavy water was expensive and difficult to produce, and several tons of it might be needed.[27] Fermi estimated that a fissioning uranium nucleus produced 1.73 neutrons on average. It was enough, but a careful design was called for to minimize losses.[28][29] (Today the average number of neutrons emitted per fissioning uranium-235 nucleus is known to be about 2.4).[30]

Szilard estimated he would need about 50 short tons (45 t) of graphite and 5 short tons (4.5 t) of uranium.[27] In December 1940, Fermi and Szilard met with Herbert G. MacPherson and Victor C. Hamister at National Carbon to discuss the possible existence of impurities in graphite, and the procurement of graphite of a purity that had never been produced commercially.[31] National Carbon, a chemical company, had taken the then unusual step of hiring MacPherson, a physicist, to research carbon arc lamps, a major commercial use for graphite at that time. Because of his work studying the spectroscopy of the carbon arc, MacPherson knew that the major relevant contaminant was boron, both because of its concentration and its affinity for absorbing neutrons,[31] confirming a suspicion of Szilard's.[32] More importantly, MacPherson and Hamister believed that techniques for producing graphite of a sufficient purity could be developed. Had Fermi and Szilard not consulted MacPherson and Hamister, they might have concluded, incorrectly, as the Germans did, that graphite was unsuitable for use as a neutron moderator.[32]

Over the next two years, MacPherson, Hamister and Lauchlin M. Currie developed thermal purification techniques for the large scale production of low boron content graphite.[31][33] The resulting product was designated AGOT graphite ("Acheson Graphite Ordinary Temperature") by National Carbon. With a neutron absorption cross section of 4.97 mbarns, the AGOT graphite is considered as the first true nuclear-grade graphite.[34] By November 1942 National Carbon had shipped 255 short tons (231 t) of AGOT graphite to the University of Chicago,[35] where it became the primary source of graphite to be used in the construction of Chicago Pile-1.[36]

Government support edit

Szilard drafted a confidential letter to the President, Franklin D. Roosevelt, warning of a German nuclear weapon project, explaining the possibility of nuclear weapons, and encouraging the development of a program that could result in their creation. With the help of Eugene Wigner and Edward Teller, he approached his old friend and collaborator Albert Einstein in August 1939, and convinced him to sign the letter, lending his prestige to the proposal.[37] The Einstein–Szilard letter resulted in the establishment of research into nuclear fission by the U.S. government.[38] An Advisory Committee on Uranium was formed under Lyman J. Briggs, a scientist and the director of the National Bureau of Standards. Its first meeting on 21 October 1939 was attended by Szilard, Teller, and Wigner. The scientists persuaded the Army and Navy to provide $6,000 for Szilard to purchase supplies for experiments—in particular, more graphite.[39]

 
Pupin Hall at Columbia University

In April 1941, the National Defense Research Committee (NDRC) created a special project headed by Arthur Compton, a Nobel-Prize-winning physics professor at the University of Chicago, to report on the uranium program. Compton's report, submitted in May 1941, foresaw the prospects of developing radiological weapons, nuclear propulsion for ships, and nuclear weapons using uranium-235 or the recently discovered plutonium.[40] In October he wrote another report on the practicality of an atomic bomb. For this report, he worked with Fermi on calculations of the critical mass of uranium-235. He also discussed the prospects for uranium enrichment with Harold Urey.[41]

Niels Bohr and John Wheeler had theorized that heavy isotopes with odd atomic mass numbers were fissile. If so, then plutonium-239 was likely to be.[42] In May 1941, Emilio Segrè and Glenn Seaborg produced 28 μg of plutonium-239 in the 60-inch (150 cm) cyclotron at the University of California, and found that it had 1.7 times the thermal neutron capture cross section of uranium-235. At the time only such minute quantities of plutonium-239 had been produced, in cyclotrons, and it was not possible to produce a sufficiently large quantity that way.[43] Compton discussed with Wigner how plutonium might be produced in a nuclear reactor, and with Robert Serber about how that plutonium might be separated from uranium. His report, submitted in November, stated that a bomb was feasible.[41]

The final draft of Compton's November 1941 report made no mention of plutonium, but after discussing the latest research with Ernest Lawrence, Compton became convinced that a plutonium bomb was also feasible. In December, Compton was placed in charge of the plutonium project.[44] Its objectives were to produce reactors to convert uranium to plutonium, to find ways to chemically separate the plutonium from the uranium, and to design and build an atomic bomb.[45][42] It fell to Compton to decide which of the different types of reactor designs the scientists should pursue, even though a successful reactor had not yet been built.[46] He proposed a schedule to achieve a controlled nuclear chain reaction by January 1943, and to have an atomic bomb by January 1945.[45]

Development edit

 
On the fourth anniversary of the team's success, 2 December 1946, members of the CP-1 team gathered at the University of Chicago. From left, Back row: Norman Hilberry, Samuel Allison, Thomas Brill, Robert Nobles, Warren Nyer, Marvin Wilkening. Middle row: Harold Agnew, William Sturm, Harold Lichtenberger, Leona Woods, Leo Szilard. Front row: Enrico Fermi, Walter Zinn, Albert Wattenberg, Herbert L. Anderson.

In a nuclear reactor, criticality is achieved when the rate of neutron production is equal to the rate of neutron losses, including both neutron absorption and neutron leakage. When a uranium-235 atom undergoes fission, it releases an average of 2.4 neutrons.[30] In the simplest case of an unreflected, homogeneous, spherical reactor, the critical radius was calculated to be approximately:

 ,[47]

where M is the average distance that a neutron travels before it is absorbed, and k is the average neutron multiplication factor. The neutrons in succeeding reactions will be amplified by a factor k, the second generation of fission events will produce k2, the third k3 and so on. In order for a self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction to occur, k must be at least 3 or 4 percent greater than 1. In other words, k must be greater than 1 without crossing the prompt critical threshold that would result in a rapid, exponential increase in the number of fission events.[47][48]

Fermi christened his apparatus a "pile". Emilio Segrè later recalled that:

I thought for a while that this term was used to refer to a source of nuclear energy in analogy with Volta's use of the Italian term pila to denote his own great invention of a source of electrical energy. I was disillusioned by Fermi himself, who told me that he simply used the common English word pile as synonymous with heap. To my surprise, Fermi never seemed to have thought of the relationship between his pile and Volta's.[49]

Another grant, this time of $40,000, was obtained from the S-1 Uranium Committee to purchase more materials, and in August 1941 Fermi began to plan the building of a sub-critical assembly to test with a smaller structure whether a larger one would work. The so-called exponential pile he proposed to build was 8 feet (2.4 m) long, 8 feet (2.4 m) wide and 11 feet (3.4 m) high.[50] This was too large to fit in the Pupin Physics Laboratories. Fermi recalled that:

We went to Dean Pegram, who was then the man who could carry out magic around the University, and we explained to him that we needed a big room. He scouted around the campus and we went with him to dark corridors and under various heating pipes and so on, to visit possible sites for this experiment and eventually a big room was discovered in Schermerhorn Hall.[51]

 
One of at least 29 experimental piles that were constructed in 1942 under the West Stands of Stagg Field. Each tested elements incorporated into the final design.

The pile was built in September 1941 from 4-by-4-by-12-inch (10 by 10 by 30 cm) graphite blocks and tinplate iron cans of uranium oxide. The cans were 8-by-8-by-8-inch (20 by 20 by 20 cm) cubes. When filled with uranium oxide, each weighed about 60 pounds (27 kg). There were 288 cans in all, and each was surrounded by graphite blocks so the whole would form a cubic lattice structure. A radium-beryllium neutron source was positioned near the bottom. The uranium oxide was heated to remove moisture, and packed into the cans while still hot on a shaking table. The cans were then soldered shut. For a workforce, Pegram secured the services of Columbia's football team. It was the custom at the time for football players to perform odd jobs around the university. They were able to manipulate the heavy cans with ease. The final result was a disappointing k of 0.87.[48][52]

Compton felt that having teams at Columbia University, Princeton University, the University of Chicago and the University of California was creating too much duplication and not enough collaboration, and he resolved to concentrate the work in one location. Nobody wanted to move, and everybody argued in favor of their own location. In January 1942, soon after the United States entered World War II, Compton decided on his own location, the University of Chicago, where he knew he had the unstinting support of university administration.[53] Chicago also had a central location, and scientists, technicians and facilities were more readily available in the Midwest, where war work had not yet taken them away.[53] In contrast, Columbia University was engaged in uranium enrichment efforts under Harold Urey and John Dunning, and was hesitant to add a third secret project.[54]

Before leaving for Chicago, Fermi's team made one last attempt to build a working pile at Columbia. Since the cans had absorbed neutrons, they were dispensed with. Instead, the uranium oxide, heated to 250 °C (480 °F) to dry it out, was pressed into cylindrical holes 3 inches (7.6 cm) long and 3 inches (7.6 cm) in diameter drilled into the graphite. The entire pile was then canned by soldering sheet metal around it, and the contents heated above the boiling point of water to remove moisture. The result was a k of 0.918.[55]

Choice of site edit

 
Carpenter Augustus Knuth, in the process of jointing a wooden block for the timber frame

In Chicago, Samuel K. Allison had found a suitable location 60 feet (18 m) long, 30 feet (9.1 m) wide and 26 feet (7.9 m) high, sunk slightly below ground level, in a space under the stands at Stagg Field originally built as a rackets court.[56][57] Stagg Field had been largely unused since the University of Chicago had given up playing American football in 1939,[47][58] but the rackets courts under West Stands were still used for playing squash and handball. Leona Woods and Anthony L. Turkevich played squash there in 1940. Since it was intended for strenuous exercise, the area was unheated, and very cold in the winter. The nearby North Stands had a pair of ice skating rinks on the ground floor, which although they were unrefrigerated, seldom melted in winter.[59] Allison used the rackets court area to construct a 7-foot (2.1 m) experimental pile before Fermi's group arrived in 1942.[56]

The United States Army Corps of Engineers assumed control of the nuclear weapons program in June 1942, and Compton's Metallurgical Laboratory became part of what came to be called the Manhattan Project.[60] Brigadier General Leslie R. Groves, Jr. became director of the Manhattan Project on 23 September 1942.[61] He visited the Metallurgical Laboratory for the first time on 5 October.[62] Between 15 September and 15 November 1942, groups under Herbert Anderson and Walter Zinn constructed 16 experimental piles under the Stagg Field stands.[63]

Fermi designed a new pile, which would be spherical to maximize k, which was predicted to be around 1.04, thereby achieving criticality.[64] Leona Woods was detailed to build boron trifluoride neutron detectors as soon as she completed her doctoral thesis. She also helped Anderson locate the required large number of 4-by-6-inch (10 by 15 cm) timbers at lumber yards in Chicago's south side.[65] Shipments of high-purity graphite arrived, mainly from National Carbon, and high-purity uranium dioxide from Mallinckrodt in St Louis, which was now producing 30 short tons (27 t) a month.[66] Metallic uranium also began arriving in larger quantities, the product of newly developed techniques.[67]

On 25 June, the Army and the Office of Scientific Research and Development (OSRD) had selected a site in the Argonne Forest near Chicago for a plutonium pilot plant; this became known as "Site A". 1,025 acres (415 ha) were leased from Cook County in August,[68][69] but by September it was apparent that the proposed facilities would be too extensive for the site, and it was decided to build the pilot plant elsewhere.[70] The subcritical piles posed little danger, but Groves felt that it would be prudent to locate a critical pile—a fully functional nuclear reactor—at a more remote site. A building at Argonne to house Fermi's experimental pile was commenced, with its completion scheduled for 20 October. Due to industrial disputes, construction fell behind schedule, and it became clear the materials for Fermi's new pile would be on hand before the new structure was completed. In early November, Fermi came to Compton with a proposal to build the experimental pile under the stands at Stagg Field.[71]

 
CP-1 under construction: 4th layer

The risk of building an operational reactor running at criticality in a populated area was a significant issue, as there was a danger of a catastrophic nuclear meltdown blanketing one of the United States' major urban areas in radioactive fission products. But the physics of the system suggested that the pile could be safely shut down even in the event of a runaway reaction. When a fuel atom undergoes fission, it releases neutrons that strike other fuel atoms in a chain reaction.[71] The time between absorbing the neutron and undergoing fission is measured in nanoseconds. Szilard had noted that this reaction leaves behind fission products that may also release neutrons, but do so over much longer periods, from microseconds to as long as minutes. In a slow reaction like the one in a pile where the fission products build up, these neutrons account for about three percent of the total neutron flux.[71][72][73]

Fermi argued that by using the delayed neutrons, and by carefully controlling the reaction rates as the power is ramped up, a pile can reach criticality at fission rates slightly below that of a chain reaction relying solely on the prompt neutrons from the fission reactions. Since the rate of release of these neutrons depends on fission events taking place some time earlier, there is a delay between any power spikes and the later criticality event. This time gives the operators leeway; if a spike in the prompt neutron flux is seen, they have several minutes before this causes a runaway reaction. If a neutron absorber, or neutron poison, is injected at any time during this period, the reactor will shut down. Consequently, the reaction can be controlled with electromechanical control systems such as control rods. Compton felt this delay was enough to provide a critical margin of safety,[71][72] and allowed Fermi to build Chicago Pile-1 at Stagg Field.[74][72]

Compton later explained that:

As a responsible officer of the University of Chicago, according to every rule of organizational protocol, I should have taken the matter to my superior. But this would have been unfair. President Hutchins was in no position to make an independent judgment of the hazards involved. Based on considerations of the University's welfare, the only answer he could have given would have been—no. And this answer would have been wrong.[74]

Compton informed Groves of his decision at the 14 November meeting of the S-1 Executive Committee.[72] Although Groves "had serious misgivings about the wisdom of Compton's suggestion", he did not interfere.[75] James B. Conant, the chairman of the NDRC, was reported to have turned white. But because of the urgency and their confidence in Fermi's calculations, no one objected.[76]

Construction edit

 
CP-1 under construction: 7th layer

Chicago Pile-1 was encased within a balloon so that the air inside could be replaced by carbon dioxide. Anderson had a dark gray balloon manufactured by Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company. A 25-foot (7.6 m) cube-shaped balloon was somewhat unusual, but the Manhattan Project's AAA priority rating ensured prompt delivery with no questions asked.[63][77] A block and tackle was used to haul it into place, with the top secured to the ceiling and three sides to the walls. The remaining side, the one facing the balcony from which Fermi directed the operation, was furled like an awning. A circle was drawn on the floor, and the stacking of graphite blocks began on the morning of 16 November 1942.[78] The first layer placed was made up entirely of graphite blocks, with no uranium. Layers without uranium were alternated with two layers containing uranium, so the uranium was enclosed in graphite.[78] Unlike later reactors, it had no radiation shielding or cooling system, as it was only intended to be operated at very low power.[79]

The work was carried out in twelve-hour shifts, with a day shift under Zinn and a night shift under Anderson.[80] For a work force they hired thirty high school dropouts who were eager to earn a bit of money before being drafted into the military.[81] They machined 45,000 graphite blocks enclosing 19,000 pieces of uranium metal and uranium oxide.[82] The graphite arrived from the manufacturers in 4.25-by-4.25-inch (10.8 by 10.8 cm) bars of various lengths. They were cut into standard lengths of 16.5 inches (42 cm), each weighing 19 pounds (8.6 kg). A lathe was used to drill 3.25-inch (8.3 cm) holes in the blocks for the control rods and the uranium. A hydraulic press was used to shape the uranium oxide into "pseudospheres", cylinders with rounded ends. Drill bits had to be sharpened after each 60 holes, which worked out to be about once an hour.[78] Graphite dust soon filled the air and made the floor slippery.[74]

Another group, under Volney C. Wilson, was responsible for instrumentation.[80] They also fabricated the control rods, which were cadmium sheets nailed to flat wooden strips, cadmium being a potent neutron absorber, and the scram line, a manila rope that when cut would drop a control rod into the pile and stop the reaction.[81] Richard Fox, who made the control-rod mechanism for the pile, remarked that the manual speed control that the operator had over the rods was simply a variable resistor, controlling an electric motor that would spool the clothesline wire over a pulley that also had two lead weights attached to ensure it would fail-safe and return to its zero position when released.[83]

 
CP-1 under construction: 10th layer

About two layers were laid per shift.[78] Woods' boron trifluoride neutron counter was inserted at the 15th layer. Thereafter, readings were taken at the end of each shift.[84] Fermi divided the square of the radius of the pile by the intensity of the radioactivity to obtain a metric that counted down to one as the pile approached criticality. At the 15th layer, it was 390; at the 19th it was 320; at the 25th it was 270 and by the 36th it was only 149. The original design was for a spherical pile, but as work proceeded, it became clear that this would not be necessary. The new graphite was purer, and 6 short tons (5.4 t) of very pure metallic uranium began to arrive from the Ames Project at Iowa State University,[85] where Harley Wilhelm and his team had developed a new process to produce uranium metal. Westinghouse Lamp Plant supplied 3 short tons (2.7 t), which it produced in a rush with a makeshift process.[86][87]

The 2.25-inch (5.7 cm) metallic uranium cylinders, known as "Spedding's eggs", were dropped in the holes in the graphite in lieu of the uranium oxide pseudospheres. The process of filling the balloon with carbon dioxide would not be necessary, and twenty layers could be dispensed with. According to Fermi's new calculations, the countdown would reach 1 between the 56th and 57th layers. The resulting pile was therefore flatter on the top than on the bottom.[78] Anderson called a halt after the 57th layer was placed.[88] When completed, the wooden frame supported an elliptical-shaped structure, 20 feet (6.1 m) high, 6 feet (1.8 m) wide at the ends and 25 feet (7.6 m) across the middle.[81][89] It contained 6 short tons (5.4 t) of uranium metal, 50 short tons (45 t) of uranium oxide and 400 short tons (360 t) of graphite, at an estimated cost of $2.7 million.[90]

First nuclear chain reaction edit

 
The Chianti fiasco purchased by Eugene Wigner to help celebrate the first self-sustaining, controlled chain reaction. It was signed by the participants.

The next day, 2 December 1942, everybody assembled for the experiment. There were 49 scientists present.[a] Although most of the S-1 Executive Committee was in Chicago, only Crawford Greenewalt was present, at Compton's invitation.[92] Other dignitaries present included Szilard, Wigner and Spedding.[91] Fermi, Compton, Anderson and Zinn gathered around the controls on the balcony, which was originally intended as a viewing platform.[93] Samuel Allison stood ready with a bucket of concentrated cadmium nitrate, which he was to throw over the pile in the event of an emergency. The startup began at 09:54. Walter Zinn removed the zip, the emergency control rod, and secured it.[93][94] Norman Hilberry stood ready with an axe to cut the scram line, which would allow the zip to fall under the influence of gravity.[94][95] While Leona Woods called out the count from the boron trifluoride detector in a loud voice, George Weil, the only one on the floor, withdrew all but one of the control rods. At 10:37 Fermi ordered Weil to remove all but 13 feet (4.0 m) of the last control rod. Weil withdrew it 6 inches (15 cm) at a time, with measurements being taken at each step.[93][94]

The process was abruptly halted by the automatic control rod reinserting itself, due to its trip level being set too low.[96] At 11:25, Fermi ordered the control rods reinserted. He then announced that it was lunch time.[93]

The experiment resumed at 14:00.[93] Weil worked the final control rod while Fermi carefully monitored the neutron activity. Fermi announced that the pile had gone critical (reached a self-sustaining reaction) at 15:25. Fermi switched the scale on the recorder to accommodate the rapidly increasing electric current from the boron trifluoride detector. He wanted to test the control circuits, but after 28 minutes, the alarm bells went off to notify everyone that the neutron flux had passed the preset safety level, and he ordered Zinn to release the zip. The reaction rapidly halted.[97][94] The pile had run for about 4.5 minutes at about 0.5 watts.[98] Wigner opened a bottle of Chianti, which they drank from paper cups.[99]

Compton notified Conant by telephone. The conversation was in an impromptu code:

Compton: The Italian navigator has landed in the New World.
Conant: How were the natives?

Compton: Very friendly.[100]

Later operation edit

On 12 December 1942, CP-1's power output was increased to 200 W, enough to power a light bulb. Lacking shielding of any kind, it was a radiation hazard for everyone in the vicinity, and further testing was continued at 0.5 W.[101] Operation was terminated on 28 February 1943,[102] and the pile was dismantled and moved to Site A in the Argonne Forest, now known as Red Gate Woods.[103][104] There the original materials were used to build Chicago Pile-2 (CP-2). Instead of being spherical, the new reactor was built in a cube-like shape, about 25 feet (7.6 m) tall with a base approximately 30 feet (9.1 m) square. It was surrounded by concrete walls 5 feet (1.5 m) thick that acted as a radiation shielding, with overhead protection from 6 inches (15 cm) of lead and 50 inches (130 cm) of wood. More uranium was used, so it contained 52 short tons (47 t) of uranium and 472 short tons (428 t) of graphite. No cooling system was provided as it only ran at a few kilowatts. CP-2 became operational in March 1943, with a k of 1.055.[105][106][107] During the war Walter Zinn allowed CP-2 to be run around the clock, and its design was suitable for conducting experiments.[108] CP-2 was joined by Chicago Pile-3, the first heavy water reactor, which went critical on 15 May 1944.[106][107]

 
Commemorative boulder at Site A

The reactors were used to undertake research related to weapons, such as investigations of the properties of tritium. Wartime experiments included measuring the neutron absorption cross-section of elements and compounds. Albert Wattenberg recalled that about 10 elements were studied each month, and 75 over the course of a year.[109] An accident involving radium and beryllium powder caused a dangerous drop in his white blood cell count that lasted for three years. As the dangers of things such as inhaling uranium oxide became more apparent, experiments were conducted on the effects of radioactive substances on laboratory test animals.[69]

Though the design was held secret for a decade, Szilard and Fermi jointly patented it, with an initial filing date of 19 December 1944 as the neutronic reactor no. 2,708,656.[110][111][112]

The Red Gate Woods later became the original site of Argonne National Laboratory, which replaced the Metallurgical Laboratory on 1 July 1946, with Zinn as its first director.[113] CP-2 and CP-3 operated for ten years before they outlived their usefulness, and Zinn ordered them shut down on 15 May 1954.[69] Their remaining usable fuel was transferred to Chicago Pile-5 at the Argonne National Laboratory's new site in DuPage County, and the CP-2 and CP-3 reactors were dismantled in 1955 and 1956. Some of the graphite blocks from CP-1/CP-2 were reused in the reflector of the TREAT reactor. High-level nuclear waste such as fuel and heavy water were shipped to Oak Ridge, Tennessee, for disposal. The rest was encased in concrete and buried in a 40-foot-deep (12 m) trench in what is now known as the Site A/Plot M Disposal Site. It is marked by a commemorative boulder.[69]

 
Leo Szilard (right) and Norman Hilberry under the plaque commemorating Chicago Pile-1 on the West Stands of Old Stagg Field. While the stands were later demolished, the plaque is now located at the site memorial.

By the 1970s there was increased public concern about the levels of radioactivity at the site, which was used for recreation by local residents. Surveys conducted in the 1980s found strontium-90 in the soil at Plot M, trace amounts of tritium in nearby wells, and plutonium, technetium, caesium, and uranium in the area. In 1994, the United States Department of Energy and the Argonne National Laboratory yielded to public pressure and earmarked $24.7 million and $3.4 million respectively to rehabilitate the site. As part of the cleanup, 500 cubic yards (380 m3) of radioactive waste was removed and sent to the Hanford Site for disposal. By 2002, the Illinois Department of Public Health had determined that the remaining materials posed no danger to public health.[69]

Significance and commemoration edit

The successful test of CP-1 not only proved that a nuclear reactor was feasible, it demonstrated that the k factor was larger than originally thought. This removed the objections to the use of air or water as a coolant rather than expensive helium. It also meant that there was greater latitude in the choice of materials for coolant pipes and control mechanisms. Wigner now pressed ahead with his design for a water-cooled production reactor. There remained concerns about the ability of a graphite-moderated reactor being able to produce plutonium on industrial scale, and for this reason the Manhattan Project continued the development of heavy water production facilities.[114] An air-cooled reactor, the X-10 Graphite Reactor, was built at the Clinton Engineer Works in Oak Ridge as part of a plutonium semiworks,[115] followed by larger water-cooled production reactors at the Hanford Site in Washington state.[116] Enough plutonium was produced for an atomic bomb by July 1945, and for two more in August.[117]

A commemorative plaque was unveiled at Stagg Field on 2 December 1952, the occasion of the tenth anniversary of CP-1 going critical.[118] It read as follows:

On December 2, 1942 man achieved here the first self-sustaining chain reaction and thereby initiated the controlled release of nuclear energy.[119]

The plaque was saved when the West Stands were demolished in August 1957.[120] The site of CP-1 was designated as a National Historic Landmark on 18 February 1965.[2] When the National Register of Historic Places was created in 1966, it was immediately added to that as well.[1] The site was also named a Chicago Landmark on 27 October 1971.[3]

Today the site of the old Stagg Field is occupied by the university's Regenstein Library, which was opened in 1970, and the Joe and Rika Mansueto Library, which was opened in 2011.[121] A Henry Moore sculpture, Nuclear Energy, stands in a small quadrangle outside the Regenstein Library on the former site of the west viewing stands' rackets court.[2] It was dedicated on 2 December 1967, to commemorate the 25th anniversary of CP-1 going critical. The commemorative plaques from 1952, 1965 and 1967 are nearby.[119] A graphite block from CP-1 can be seen at the Bradbury Science Museum in Los Alamos, New Mexico; another is on display at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago.[122] On 2 December 2017, the 75th anniversary, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in restoring a research-graphite pile, similar in design to Chicago Pile-1, ceremonially inserted the final uranium slugs.[123]

Notes edit

  1. ^ The Chicago Pile 1 Pioneers were: Harold Agnew, Herbert L. Anderson, Wayne Arnold, Hugh M. Barton, Thomas Brill, Robert F. Christy, Arthur H. Compton, Enrico Fermi, Richard J. Fox, Stewart Fox, Carl C. Gamertsfelder, Alvin C. Graves, Crawford Greenewalt, Norman Hilberry, David L. Hill, William H. Hinch, Robert E. Johnson, W.R. Kanne, August C. Knuth, Phillip Grant Koontz, Herbert E. Kubitschek, Harold V. Lichtenberger, George M. Maronde, Anthony J. Matz, George Miller, George D. Monk, Henry P. Newson, Robert G. Nobles, Warren E. Nyer, Wilcox P. Overbeck, J. Howard Parsons, Gerard S. Pawlicki, Theodore Petry, David P. Rudolph, Leon Sayvetz, Leo Seren, Louis Slotin, Frank Spedding, William J. Sturm, Leo Szilard, Albert Wattenberg, Richard J. Watts, George Weil, Eugene P. Wigner, Marvin H. Wilkening, Volney C. (Bill) Wilson, Leona Woods and Walter Zinn.[91]
  1. ^ a b c "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. 9 July 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d . National Historic Landmark Summary Listing. National Park Service. Archived from the original on 5 April 2015. Retrieved 26 July 2013.
  3. ^ a b "Site of the First Self-Sustaining Controlled Nuclear Chain Reaction". City of Chicago. Retrieved 26 July 2013.
  4. ^ Fermi 1982, p. 24.
  5. ^ Ölander, Arne. "The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1956 – Award Ceremony Speech". The Nobel Foundation. Retrieved 23 September 2015.
  6. ^ Rhodes 1986, pp. 13, 28.
  7. ^ Wellerstein, Alex (16 May 2014). "Szilard's chain reaction: visionary or crank?". Restricted Data. Retrieved 23 September 2015.
  8. ^ Szilard, Leo. "Improvements in or relating to the transmutation of chemical elements, British patent number: GB630726 (filed: 28 June 1934; published: 30 March 1936)". Retrieved 23 September 2015.
  9. ^ Rhodes 1986, pp. 251–254.
  10. ^ Hahn, O.; Strassmann, F. (1939). "Über den Nachweis und das Verhalten der bei der Bestrahlung des Urans mittels Neutronen entstehenden Erdalkalimetalle (On the detection and characteristics of the alkaline earth metals formed by irradiation of uranium with neutrons)". Die Naturwissenschaften. 27 (1): 11–15. Bibcode:1939NW.....27...11H. doi:10.1007/BF01488241. S2CID 5920336.
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  36. ^ Nightingale 1962, p. 4.
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  41. ^ a b Hewlett & Anderson 1962, pp. 46–49.
  42. ^ a b Anderson 1975, p. 82.
  43. ^ Salvetti 2001, pp. 192–193.
  44. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, pp. 50–51.
  45. ^ a b Hewlett & Anderson 1962, pp. 54–55.
  46. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, pp. 180–181.
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  76. ^ Nichols 1987, pp. 66.
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  89. ^ Fermi, Enrico (1952). "Experimental Production of a Divergent Chain Reaction". American Journal of Physics. 20 (9): 536–558. Bibcode:1952AmJPh..20..536F. doi:10.1119/1.1933322. ISSN 0002-9505.
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References edit

  • Allardice, Corbin; Trapnell, Edward R. (December 1982). "The First Pile". The First Reactor (PDF). Oak Ridge, Tennessee: United States Atomic Energy Commission, Division of Technical Information. pp. 1–21. OCLC 22115. Retrieved 27 May 2017.
  • Amaldi, Ugo (2001). "Nuclear Physics from the Nineteen Thirties to the Present Day". In Bernardini, C.; Bonolis, Luisa (eds.). Enrico Fermi: His Work and Legacy. Bologna: Società Italiana di Fisica: Springer. pp. 151–176. ISBN 978-88-7438-015-2. OCLC 56686431.
  • Anderson, Herbert L. (1975). "Assisting Fermi". In Wilson, Jane (ed.). All In Our Time: The Reminiscences of Twelve Nuclear Pioneers. Chicago: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. pp. 66–104. OCLC 1982052.
  • Bonolis, Luisa (2001). "Enrico Fermi's Scientific Work". In Bernardini, C.; Bonolis, Luisa (eds.). Enrico Fermi: His Work and Legacy. Bologna: Società Italiana di Fisica: Springer. pp. 314–394. ISBN 978-88-7438-015-2. OCLC 56686431.
  • Compton, Arthur (1956). Atomic Quest. New York: Oxford University Press. OCLC 173307.
  • Currie, L. M.; Hamister, V. C.; MacPherson, H. G. (1955). The Production and Properties of Graphite for Reactors. National Carbon Company. OCLC 349979.
  • Embrey, Lee Anna (1970). "George Braxton Pegram 1876–1958" (PDF). Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences. 41: 357–407. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
  • Fermi, Enrico (December 1982). "Fermi's Own Story". The First Reactor (PDF). Oak Ridge, Tennessee: United States Atomic Energy Commission, Division of Technical Information. pp. 22–26. OCLC 22115. Retrieved 27 May 2017.
  • Groves, Leslie (1962). Now It Can Be Told: The Story of the Manhattan Project. New York: Harper. ISBN 978-0-306-70738-4. OCLC 537684.
  • Hewlett, Richard G.; Anderson, Oscar E. (1962). The New World, 1939–1946 (PDF). University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press. ISBN 978-0-520-07186-5. OCLC 637004643. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
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  • Jones, Vincent (1985). Manhattan: The Army and the Atomic Bomb. Washington, D.C.: United States Army Center of Military History. OCLC 10913875.
  • Lanouette, William; Silard, Bela (1992). Genius in the Shadows: A Biography of Leo Szilard: The Man Behind The Bomb. New York: Skyhorse Publishing. ISBN 978-1-62636-023-5. OCLC 25508555.
  • Libby, Leona Marshall (1979). The Uranium People. New York: Crane, Russak. ISBN 978-0-8448-1300-4. OCLC 4665032.
  • Manhattan District (1947). Manhattan District History, Book IV – Pile Project X-10, Volume 2 – Research, Part 1 – Metallurgical Laboratory (PDF). Washington, D.C.: Manhattan District.
  • Nichols, Kenneth D. (1987). The Road to Trinity: A Personal Account of How America's Nuclear Policies Were Made. New York: William Morrow and Company. ISBN 978-0-688-06910-0. OCLC 15223648.
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  • Salvetti, Carlo (2001). "The Birth of Nuclear Energy: Fermi's Pile". In Bernardini, C.; Bonolis, Luisa (eds.). Enrico Fermi: His Work and Legacy. Bologna: Società Italiana di Fisica: Springer. pp. 177–203. ISBN 978-88-7438-015-2. OCLC 56686431.
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External links edit

  • The Day Tomorrow Began: The Story of Chicago Pile 1, the First Atomic Pile on YouTube – AEC Video 1967
  • Photos of CP-1 27 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine The University of Chicago Library Archive. Includes photos and sketches of CP-1.
  • Video of west stands of Stagg Field, Institute for the Study of Metals (Metallurgical Laboratory), Enrico Fermi, and an active experiment using CP-1
  • The First Pile 11-page story about CP-1
  • . Department of Energy. Archived from the original on 27 March 2019. Retrieved 23 September 2015. Video of two of the last surviving CP-1 pioneers, Harold Agnew and Warren Nyer.

chicago, pile, world, first, artificial, nuclear, reactor, december, 1942, first, human, made, self, sustaining, nuclear, chain, reaction, initiated, during, experiment, enrico, fermi, secret, development, reactor, first, major, technical, achievement, manhatt. Chicago Pile 1 CP 1 was the world s first artificial nuclear reactor On 2 December 1942 the first human made self sustaining nuclear chain reaction was initiated in CP 1 during an experiment led by Enrico Fermi The secret development of the reactor was the first major technical achievement for the Manhattan Project the Allied effort to create nuclear weapons during World War II Developed by the Metallurgical Laboratory at the University of Chicago CP 1 was built under the west viewing stands of the original Stagg Field Although the project s civilian and military leaders had misgivings about the possibility of a disastrous runaway reaction they trusted Fermi s safety calculations and decided they could carry out the experiment in a densely populated area Fermi described the reactor as a crude pile of black bricks and wooden timbers 4 Chicago Pile 1Reactor conceptResearch reactorDesigned and built byMetallurgical LaboratoryOperational1942 to 1943 81 years ago 1943 StatusDismantledLocationChicago Illinois USMain parameters of the reactor coreFuel fissile material Natural uraniumFuel stateSolid pellets Neutron energy spectrumSlowPrimary control methodControl rodsPrimary moderatorNuclear graphite bricks Primary coolantNoneReactor usagePrimary useExperimentalCriticality date 2 December 1942Operator ownerUniversity of Chicago Manhattan ProjectRemarksWorld s first artificial nuclear reactorSite of the First Self Sustaining Nuclear ReactionU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S National Historic LandmarkChicago LandmarkCoordinates41 47 33 N 87 36 4 W 41 79250 N 87 60111 W 41 79250 87 60111Built1942 2 NRHP reference No 66000314 1 Significant datesAdded to NRHP15 October 1966 66000314 1 Designated NHL18 February 1965 2 Designated CL27 October 1971 3 After a series of attempts the successful reactor was assembled in November 1942 by a team of about 30 that in addition to Fermi included scientists Leo Szilard who had previously formulated an idea for non fission chain reaction Leona Woods Herbert L Anderson Walter Zinn Martin D Whitaker and George Weil The reactor used natural uranium This required a very large amount of material in order to reach criticality along with graphite used as a neutron moderator The reactor contained 45 000 ultra pure graphite blocks weighing 360 short tons 330 tonnes and was fueled by 5 4 short tons 4 9 tonnes of uranium metal and 45 short tons 41 tonnes of uranium oxide Unlike most subsequent nuclear reactors it had no radiation shielding or cooling system as it operated at very low power about one half watt The pursuit of a reactor had been touched off by concern that Nazi Germany had a substantial scientific lead The success of Chicago Pile 1 provided the first vivid demonstration of the feasibility of the military use of nuclear energy by the Allies as well as the reality of the danger that Nazi Germany could succeed in producing nuclear weapons Previously estimates of critical masses had been crude calculations leading to order of magnitude uncertainties about the size of a hypothetical bomb The successful use of graphite as a moderator paved the way for progress in the Allied effort whereas the German program languished partly because of the belief that scarce and expensive heavy water would have to be used for that purpose The Germans had failed to account for the importance of boron and cadmium impurities in the graphite samples on which they ran their test of its usability as a moderator while Leo Szilard and Enrico Fermi had asked suppliers about the most common contaminations of graphite after a first failed test They consequently ensured that the next test would be run with graphite entirely devoid of them As it turned out both boron and cadmium were strong neutron poisons In 1943 CP 1 was moved to Site A a wartime research facility outside Chicago where it was reconfigured to become Chicago Pile 2 CP 2 There it was operated for research until 1954 when it was dismantled and buried The stands at Stagg Field were demolished in August 1957 the site is now a National Historic Landmark and a Chicago Landmark Contents 1 Origins 2 Government support 3 Development 4 Choice of site 5 Construction 6 First nuclear chain reaction 7 Later operation 8 Significance and commemoration 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksOrigins editThe idea of a chemical chain reaction was first suggested in 1913 by the German chemist Max Bodenstein for a situation in which two molecules react to form not just the final reaction products but also some unstable molecules that can further react with the original substances to cause more to react 5 The concept of a nuclear chain reaction was first hypothesized by the Hungarian scientist Leo Szilard on 12 September 1933 6 Szilard realized that if a nuclear reaction produced neutrons or dineutrons which then caused further nuclear reactions the process might be self perpetuating Szilard proposed using mixtures of lighter known isotopes which produced neutrons in copious amounts and also entertained the possibility of using uranium as a fuel 7 He filed a patent for his idea of a simple nuclear reactor the following year 8 The discovery of nuclear fission by German chemists Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann in 1938 9 10 and its theoretical explanation and naming by their collaborators Lise Meitner and Otto Frisch 11 12 opened up the possibility of creating a nuclear chain reaction with uranium but initial experiments were unsuccessful 13 14 15 16 In order for a chain reaction to occur fissioning uranium atoms had to emit additional neutrons to keep the reaction going At Columbia University in New York Italian physicist Enrico Fermi collaborated with Americans John Dunning Herbert L Anderson Eugene T Booth G Norris Glasoe and Francis G Slack to conduct the first nuclear fission experiment in the United States on 25 January 1939 17 18 Subsequent work confirmed that fast neutrons were indeed produced by fission 19 20 Szilard obtained permission from the head of the Physics Department at Columbia George B Pegram to use a laboratory for three months and he persuaded Walter Zinn to become his collaborator 21 They conducted a simple experiment on the seventh floor of Pupin Hall at Columbia using a radium beryllium source to bombard uranium with neutrons They discovered significant neutron multiplication in natural uranium proving that a chain reaction might be possible 22 Fermi and Szilard still believed that enormous quantities of uranium would be required for an atomic bomb and therefore concentrated on producing a controlled chain reaction 23 Fermi urged Alfred O C Nier to separate uranium isotopes for determination of the fissile component and on 29 February 1940 Nier separated the first uranium 235 sample which after being mailed to Dunning at Columbia was confirmed to be the isolated fissile material 24 When he was working in Rome Fermi had discovered that collisions between neutrons and neutron moderators can slow the neutrons down and thereby make them more likely to be captured by uranium nuclei causing the uranium to fission 25 26 Szilard suggested to Fermi that they use carbon in the form of graphite as a moderator As a back up plan he considered heavy water This contained deuterium which would not absorb neutrons like ordinary hydrogen and was a better neutron moderator than carbon but heavy water was expensive and difficult to produce and several tons of it might be needed 27 Fermi estimated that a fissioning uranium nucleus produced 1 73 neutrons on average It was enough but a careful design was called for to minimize losses 28 29 Today the average number of neutrons emitted per fissioning uranium 235 nucleus is known to be about 2 4 30 Szilard estimated he would need about 50 short tons 45 t of graphite and 5 short tons 4 5 t of uranium 27 In December 1940 Fermi and Szilard met with Herbert G MacPherson and Victor C Hamister at National Carbon to discuss the possible existence of impurities in graphite and the procurement of graphite of a purity that had never been produced commercially 31 National Carbon a chemical company had taken the then unusual step of hiring MacPherson a physicist to research carbon arc lamps a major commercial use for graphite at that time Because of his work studying the spectroscopy of the carbon arc MacPherson knew that the major relevant contaminant was boron both because of its concentration and its affinity for absorbing neutrons 31 confirming a suspicion of Szilard s 32 More importantly MacPherson and Hamister believed that techniques for producing graphite of a sufficient purity could be developed Had Fermi and Szilard not consulted MacPherson and Hamister they might have concluded incorrectly as the Germans did that graphite was unsuitable for use as a neutron moderator 32 Over the next two years MacPherson Hamister and Lauchlin M Currie developed thermal purification techniques for the large scale production of low boron content graphite 31 33 The resulting product was designated AGOT graphite Acheson Graphite Ordinary Temperature by National Carbon With a neutron absorption cross section of 4 97 mbarns the AGOT graphite is considered as the first true nuclear grade graphite 34 By November 1942 National Carbon had shipped 255 short tons 231 t of AGOT graphite to the University of Chicago 35 where it became the primary source of graphite to be used in the construction of Chicago Pile 1 36 Government support editSzilard drafted a confidential letter to the President Franklin D Roosevelt warning of a German nuclear weapon project explaining the possibility of nuclear weapons and encouraging the development of a program that could result in their creation With the help of Eugene Wigner and Edward Teller he approached his old friend and collaborator Albert Einstein in August 1939 and convinced him to sign the letter lending his prestige to the proposal 37 The Einstein Szilard letter resulted in the establishment of research into nuclear fission by the U S government 38 An Advisory Committee on Uranium was formed under Lyman J Briggs a scientist and the director of the National Bureau of Standards Its first meeting on 21 October 1939 was attended by Szilard Teller and Wigner The scientists persuaded the Army and Navy to provide 6 000 for Szilard to purchase supplies for experiments in particular more graphite 39 nbsp Pupin Hall at Columbia UniversityIn April 1941 the National Defense Research Committee NDRC created a special project headed by Arthur Compton a Nobel Prize winning physics professor at the University of Chicago to report on the uranium program Compton s report submitted in May 1941 foresaw the prospects of developing radiological weapons nuclear propulsion for ships and nuclear weapons using uranium 235 or the recently discovered plutonium 40 In October he wrote another report on the practicality of an atomic bomb For this report he worked with Fermi on calculations of the critical mass of uranium 235 He also discussed the prospects for uranium enrichment with Harold Urey 41 Niels Bohr and John Wheeler had theorized that heavy isotopes with odd atomic mass numbers were fissile If so then plutonium 239 was likely to be 42 In May 1941 Emilio Segre and Glenn Seaborg produced 28 mg of plutonium 239 in the 60 inch 150 cm cyclotron at the University of California and found that it had 1 7 times the thermal neutron capture cross section of uranium 235 At the time only such minute quantities of plutonium 239 had been produced in cyclotrons and it was not possible to produce a sufficiently large quantity that way 43 Compton discussed with Wigner how plutonium might be produced in a nuclear reactor and with Robert Serber about how that plutonium might be separated from uranium His report submitted in November stated that a bomb was feasible 41 The final draft of Compton s November 1941 report made no mention of plutonium but after discussing the latest research with Ernest Lawrence Compton became convinced that a plutonium bomb was also feasible In December Compton was placed in charge of the plutonium project 44 Its objectives were to produce reactors to convert uranium to plutonium to find ways to chemically separate the plutonium from the uranium and to design and build an atomic bomb 45 42 It fell to Compton to decide which of the different types of reactor designs the scientists should pursue even though a successful reactor had not yet been built 46 He proposed a schedule to achieve a controlled nuclear chain reaction by January 1943 and to have an atomic bomb by January 1945 45 Development edit nbsp On the fourth anniversary of the team s success 2 December 1946 members of the CP 1 team gathered at the University of Chicago From left Back row Norman Hilberry Samuel Allison Thomas Brill Robert Nobles Warren Nyer Marvin Wilkening Middle row Harold Agnew William Sturm Harold Lichtenberger Leona Woods Leo Szilard Front row Enrico Fermi Walter Zinn Albert Wattenberg Herbert L Anderson In a nuclear reactor criticality is achieved when the rate of neutron production is equal to the rate of neutron losses including both neutron absorption and neutron leakage When a uranium 235 atom undergoes fission it releases an average of 2 4 neutrons 30 In the simplest case of an unreflected homogeneous spherical reactor the critical radius was calculated to be approximately R c r i t p M k 1 displaystyle R crit approx frac pi M sqrt k 1 nbsp 47 where M is the average distance that a neutron travels before it is absorbed and k is the average neutron multiplication factor The neutrons in succeeding reactions will be amplified by a factor k the second generation of fission events will produce k2 the third k3 and so on In order for a self sustaining nuclear chain reaction to occur k must be at least 3 or 4 percent greater than 1 In other words k must be greater than 1 without crossing the prompt critical threshold that would result in a rapid exponential increase in the number of fission events 47 48 Fermi christened his apparatus a pile Emilio Segre later recalled that I thought for a while that this term was used to refer to a source of nuclear energy in analogy with Volta s use of the Italian term pila to denote his own great invention of a source of electrical energy I was disillusioned by Fermi himself who told me that he simply used the common English word pile as synonymous with heap To my surprise Fermi never seemed to have thought of the relationship between his pile and Volta s 49 Another grant this time of 40 000 was obtained from the S 1 Uranium Committee to purchase more materials and in August 1941 Fermi began to plan the building of a sub critical assembly to test with a smaller structure whether a larger one would work The so called exponential pile he proposed to build was 8 feet 2 4 m long 8 feet 2 4 m wide and 11 feet 3 4 m high 50 This was too large to fit in the Pupin Physics Laboratories Fermi recalled that We went to Dean Pegram who was then the man who could carry out magic around the University and we explained to him that we needed a big room He scouted around the campus and we went with him to dark corridors and under various heating pipes and so on to visit possible sites for this experiment and eventually a big room was discovered in Schermerhorn Hall 51 nbsp One of at least 29 experimental piles that were constructed in 1942 under the West Stands of Stagg Field Each tested elements incorporated into the final design The pile was built in September 1941 from 4 by 4 by 12 inch 10 by 10 by 30 cm graphite blocks and tinplate iron cans of uranium oxide The cans were 8 by 8 by 8 inch 20 by 20 by 20 cm cubes When filled with uranium oxide each weighed about 60 pounds 27 kg There were 288 cans in all and each was surrounded by graphite blocks so the whole would form a cubic lattice structure A radium beryllium neutron source was positioned near the bottom The uranium oxide was heated to remove moisture and packed into the cans while still hot on a shaking table The cans were then soldered shut For a workforce Pegram secured the services of Columbia s football team It was the custom at the time for football players to perform odd jobs around the university They were able to manipulate the heavy cans with ease The final result was a disappointing k of 0 87 48 52 Compton felt that having teams at Columbia University Princeton University the University of Chicago and the University of California was creating too much duplication and not enough collaboration and he resolved to concentrate the work in one location Nobody wanted to move and everybody argued in favor of their own location In January 1942 soon after the United States entered World War II Compton decided on his own location the University of Chicago where he knew he had the unstinting support of university administration 53 Chicago also had a central location and scientists technicians and facilities were more readily available in the Midwest where war work had not yet taken them away 53 In contrast Columbia University was engaged in uranium enrichment efforts under Harold Urey and John Dunning and was hesitant to add a third secret project 54 Before leaving for Chicago Fermi s team made one last attempt to build a working pile at Columbia Since the cans had absorbed neutrons they were dispensed with Instead the uranium oxide heated to 250 C 480 F to dry it out was pressed into cylindrical holes 3 inches 7 6 cm long and 3 inches 7 6 cm in diameter drilled into the graphite The entire pile was then canned by soldering sheet metal around it and the contents heated above the boiling point of water to remove moisture The result was a k of 0 918 55 Choice of site edit nbsp Carpenter Augustus Knuth in the process of jointing a wooden block for the timber frameIn Chicago Samuel K Allison had found a suitable location 60 feet 18 m long 30 feet 9 1 m wide and 26 feet 7 9 m high sunk slightly below ground level in a space under the stands at Stagg Field originally built as a rackets court 56 57 Stagg Field had been largely unused since the University of Chicago had given up playing American football in 1939 47 58 but the rackets courts under West Stands were still used for playing squash and handball Leona Woods and Anthony L Turkevich played squash there in 1940 Since it was intended for strenuous exercise the area was unheated and very cold in the winter The nearby North Stands had a pair of ice skating rinks on the ground floor which although they were unrefrigerated seldom melted in winter 59 Allison used the rackets court area to construct a 7 foot 2 1 m experimental pile before Fermi s group arrived in 1942 56 The United States Army Corps of Engineers assumed control of the nuclear weapons program in June 1942 and Compton s Metallurgical Laboratory became part of what came to be called the Manhattan Project 60 Brigadier General Leslie R Groves Jr became director of the Manhattan Project on 23 September 1942 61 He visited the Metallurgical Laboratory for the first time on 5 October 62 Between 15 September and 15 November 1942 groups under Herbert Anderson and Walter Zinn constructed 16 experimental piles under the Stagg Field stands 63 Fermi designed a new pile which would be spherical to maximize k which was predicted to be around 1 04 thereby achieving criticality 64 Leona Woods was detailed to build boron trifluoride neutron detectors as soon as she completed her doctoral thesis She also helped Anderson locate the required large number of 4 by 6 inch 10 by 15 cm timbers at lumber yards in Chicago s south side 65 Shipments of high purity graphite arrived mainly from National Carbon and high purity uranium dioxide from Mallinckrodt in St Louis which was now producing 30 short tons 27 t a month 66 Metallic uranium also began arriving in larger quantities the product of newly developed techniques 67 On 25 June the Army and the Office of Scientific Research and Development OSRD had selected a site in the Argonne Forest near Chicago for a plutonium pilot plant this became known as Site A 1 025 acres 415 ha were leased from Cook County in August 68 69 but by September it was apparent that the proposed facilities would be too extensive for the site and it was decided to build the pilot plant elsewhere 70 The subcritical piles posed little danger but Groves felt that it would be prudent to locate a critical pile a fully functional nuclear reactor at a more remote site A building at Argonne to house Fermi s experimental pile was commenced with its completion scheduled for 20 October Due to industrial disputes construction fell behind schedule and it became clear the materials for Fermi s new pile would be on hand before the new structure was completed In early November Fermi came to Compton with a proposal to build the experimental pile under the stands at Stagg Field 71 nbsp CP 1 under construction 4th layerThe risk of building an operational reactor running at criticality in a populated area was a significant issue as there was a danger of a catastrophic nuclear meltdown blanketing one of the United States major urban areas in radioactive fission products But the physics of the system suggested that the pile could be safely shut down even in the event of a runaway reaction When a fuel atom undergoes fission it releases neutrons that strike other fuel atoms in a chain reaction 71 The time between absorbing the neutron and undergoing fission is measured in nanoseconds Szilard had noted that this reaction leaves behind fission products that may also release neutrons but do so over much longer periods from microseconds to as long as minutes In a slow reaction like the one in a pile where the fission products build up these neutrons account for about three percent of the total neutron flux 71 72 73 Fermi argued that by using the delayed neutrons and by carefully controlling the reaction rates as the power is ramped up a pile can reach criticality at fission rates slightly below that of a chain reaction relying solely on the prompt neutrons from the fission reactions Since the rate of release of these neutrons depends on fission events taking place some time earlier there is a delay between any power spikes and the later criticality event This time gives the operators leeway if a spike in the prompt neutron flux is seen they have several minutes before this causes a runaway reaction If a neutron absorber or neutron poison is injected at any time during this period the reactor will shut down Consequently the reaction can be controlled with electromechanical control systems such as control rods Compton felt this delay was enough to provide a critical margin of safety 71 72 and allowed Fermi to build Chicago Pile 1 at Stagg Field 74 72 Compton later explained that As a responsible officer of the University of Chicago according to every rule of organizational protocol I should have taken the matter to my superior But this would have been unfair President Hutchins was in no position to make an independent judgment of the hazards involved Based on considerations of the University s welfare the only answer he could have given would have been no And this answer would have been wrong 74 Compton informed Groves of his decision at the 14 November meeting of the S 1 Executive Committee 72 Although Groves had serious misgivings about the wisdom of Compton s suggestion he did not interfere 75 James B Conant the chairman of the NDRC was reported to have turned white But because of the urgency and their confidence in Fermi s calculations no one objected 76 Construction edit nbsp CP 1 under construction 7th layerChicago Pile 1 was encased within a balloon so that the air inside could be replaced by carbon dioxide Anderson had a dark gray balloon manufactured by Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company A 25 foot 7 6 m cube shaped balloon was somewhat unusual but the Manhattan Project s AAA priority rating ensured prompt delivery with no questions asked 63 77 A block and tackle was used to haul it into place with the top secured to the ceiling and three sides to the walls The remaining side the one facing the balcony from which Fermi directed the operation was furled like an awning A circle was drawn on the floor and the stacking of graphite blocks began on the morning of 16 November 1942 78 The first layer placed was made up entirely of graphite blocks with no uranium Layers without uranium were alternated with two layers containing uranium so the uranium was enclosed in graphite 78 Unlike later reactors it had no radiation shielding or cooling system as it was only intended to be operated at very low power 79 The work was carried out in twelve hour shifts with a day shift under Zinn and a night shift under Anderson 80 For a work force they hired thirty high school dropouts who were eager to earn a bit of money before being drafted into the military 81 They machined 45 000 graphite blocks enclosing 19 000 pieces of uranium metal and uranium oxide 82 The graphite arrived from the manufacturers in 4 25 by 4 25 inch 10 8 by 10 8 cm bars of various lengths They were cut into standard lengths of 16 5 inches 42 cm each weighing 19 pounds 8 6 kg A lathe was used to drill 3 25 inch 8 3 cm holes in the blocks for the control rods and the uranium A hydraulic press was used to shape the uranium oxide into pseudospheres cylinders with rounded ends Drill bits had to be sharpened after each 60 holes which worked out to be about once an hour 78 Graphite dust soon filled the air and made the floor slippery 74 Another group under Volney C Wilson was responsible for instrumentation 80 They also fabricated the control rods which were cadmium sheets nailed to flat wooden strips cadmium being a potent neutron absorber and the scram line a manila rope that when cut would drop a control rod into the pile and stop the reaction 81 Richard Fox who made the control rod mechanism for the pile remarked that the manual speed control that the operator had over the rods was simply a variable resistor controlling an electric motor that would spool the clothesline wire over a pulley that also had two lead weights attached to ensure it would fail safe and return to its zero position when released 83 nbsp CP 1 under construction 10th layerAbout two layers were laid per shift 78 Woods boron trifluoride neutron counter was inserted at the 15th layer Thereafter readings were taken at the end of each shift 84 Fermi divided the square of the radius of the pile by the intensity of the radioactivity to obtain a metric that counted down to one as the pile approached criticality At the 15th layer it was 390 at the 19th it was 320 at the 25th it was 270 and by the 36th it was only 149 The original design was for a spherical pile but as work proceeded it became clear that this would not be necessary The new graphite was purer and 6 short tons 5 4 t of very pure metallic uranium began to arrive from the Ames Project at Iowa State University 85 where Harley Wilhelm and his team had developed a new process to produce uranium metal Westinghouse Lamp Plant supplied 3 short tons 2 7 t which it produced in a rush with a makeshift process 86 87 The 2 25 inch 5 7 cm metallic uranium cylinders known as Spedding s eggs were dropped in the holes in the graphite in lieu of the uranium oxide pseudospheres The process of filling the balloon with carbon dioxide would not be necessary and twenty layers could be dispensed with According to Fermi s new calculations the countdown would reach 1 between the 56th and 57th layers The resulting pile was therefore flatter on the top than on the bottom 78 Anderson called a halt after the 57th layer was placed 88 When completed the wooden frame supported an elliptical shaped structure 20 feet 6 1 m high 6 feet 1 8 m wide at the ends and 25 feet 7 6 m across the middle 81 89 It contained 6 short tons 5 4 t of uranium metal 50 short tons 45 t of uranium oxide and 400 short tons 360 t of graphite at an estimated cost of 2 7 million 90 First nuclear chain reaction edit nbsp The Chianti fiasco purchased by Eugene Wigner to help celebrate the first self sustaining controlled chain reaction It was signed by the participants The next day 2 December 1942 everybody assembled for the experiment There were 49 scientists present a Although most of the S 1 Executive Committee was in Chicago only Crawford Greenewalt was present at Compton s invitation 92 Other dignitaries present included Szilard Wigner and Spedding 91 Fermi Compton Anderson and Zinn gathered around the controls on the balcony which was originally intended as a viewing platform 93 Samuel Allison stood ready with a bucket of concentrated cadmium nitrate which he was to throw over the pile in the event of an emergency The startup began at 09 54 Walter Zinn removed the zip the emergency control rod and secured it 93 94 Norman Hilberry stood ready with an axe to cut the scram line which would allow the zip to fall under the influence of gravity 94 95 While Leona Woods called out the count from the boron trifluoride detector in a loud voice George Weil the only one on the floor withdrew all but one of the control rods At 10 37 Fermi ordered Weil to remove all but 13 feet 4 0 m of the last control rod Weil withdrew it 6 inches 15 cm at a time with measurements being taken at each step 93 94 The process was abruptly halted by the automatic control rod reinserting itself due to its trip level being set too low 96 At 11 25 Fermi ordered the control rods reinserted He then announced that it was lunch time 93 The experiment resumed at 14 00 93 Weil worked the final control rod while Fermi carefully monitored the neutron activity Fermi announced that the pile had gone critical reached a self sustaining reaction at 15 25 Fermi switched the scale on the recorder to accommodate the rapidly increasing electric current from the boron trifluoride detector He wanted to test the control circuits but after 28 minutes the alarm bells went off to notify everyone that the neutron flux had passed the preset safety level and he ordered Zinn to release the zip The reaction rapidly halted 97 94 The pile had run for about 4 5 minutes at about 0 5 watts 98 Wigner opened a bottle of Chianti which they drank from paper cups 99 Compton notified Conant by telephone The conversation was in an impromptu code Compton The Italian navigator has landed in the New World Conant How were the natives Compton Very friendly 100 Later operation editMain article Site A On 12 December 1942 CP 1 s power output was increased to 200 W enough to power a light bulb Lacking shielding of any kind it was a radiation hazard for everyone in the vicinity and further testing was continued at 0 5 W 101 Operation was terminated on 28 February 1943 102 and the pile was dismantled and moved to Site A in the Argonne Forest now known as Red Gate Woods 103 104 There the original materials were used to build Chicago Pile 2 CP 2 Instead of being spherical the new reactor was built in a cube like shape about 25 feet 7 6 m tall with a base approximately 30 feet 9 1 m square It was surrounded by concrete walls 5 feet 1 5 m thick that acted as a radiation shielding with overhead protection from 6 inches 15 cm of lead and 50 inches 130 cm of wood More uranium was used so it contained 52 short tons 47 t of uranium and 472 short tons 428 t of graphite No cooling system was provided as it only ran at a few kilowatts CP 2 became operational in March 1943 with a k of 1 055 105 106 107 During the war Walter Zinn allowed CP 2 to be run around the clock and its design was suitable for conducting experiments 108 CP 2 was joined by Chicago Pile 3 the first heavy water reactor which went critical on 15 May 1944 106 107 nbsp Commemorative boulder at Site AThe reactors were used to undertake research related to weapons such as investigations of the properties of tritium Wartime experiments included measuring the neutron absorption cross section of elements and compounds Albert Wattenberg recalled that about 10 elements were studied each month and 75 over the course of a year 109 An accident involving radium and beryllium powder caused a dangerous drop in his white blood cell count that lasted for three years As the dangers of things such as inhaling uranium oxide became more apparent experiments were conducted on the effects of radioactive substances on laboratory test animals 69 Though the design was held secret for a decade Szilard and Fermi jointly patented it with an initial filing date of 19 December 1944 as the neutronic reactor no 2 708 656 110 111 112 The Red Gate Woods later became the original site of Argonne National Laboratory which replaced the Metallurgical Laboratory on 1 July 1946 with Zinn as its first director 113 CP 2 and CP 3 operated for ten years before they outlived their usefulness and Zinn ordered them shut down on 15 May 1954 69 Their remaining usable fuel was transferred to Chicago Pile 5 at the Argonne National Laboratory s new site in DuPage County and the CP 2 and CP 3 reactors were dismantled in 1955 and 1956 Some of the graphite blocks from CP 1 CP 2 were reused in the reflector of the TREAT reactor High level nuclear waste such as fuel and heavy water were shipped to Oak Ridge Tennessee for disposal The rest was encased in concrete and buried in a 40 foot deep 12 m trench in what is now known as the Site A Plot M Disposal Site It is marked by a commemorative boulder 69 nbsp Leo Szilard right and Norman Hilberry under the plaque commemorating Chicago Pile 1 on the West Stands of Old Stagg Field While the stands were later demolished the plaque is now located at the site memorial By the 1970s there was increased public concern about the levels of radioactivity at the site which was used for recreation by local residents Surveys conducted in the 1980s found strontium 90 in the soil at Plot M trace amounts of tritium in nearby wells and plutonium technetium caesium and uranium in the area In 1994 the United States Department of Energy and the Argonne National Laboratory yielded to public pressure and earmarked 24 7 million and 3 4 million respectively to rehabilitate the site As part of the cleanup 500 cubic yards 380 m3 of radioactive waste was removed and sent to the Hanford Site for disposal By 2002 the Illinois Department of Public Health had determined that the remaining materials posed no danger to public health 69 Significance and commemoration editThe successful test of CP 1 not only proved that a nuclear reactor was feasible it demonstrated that the k factor was larger than originally thought This removed the objections to the use of air or water as a coolant rather than expensive helium It also meant that there was greater latitude in the choice of materials for coolant pipes and control mechanisms Wigner now pressed ahead with his design for a water cooled production reactor There remained concerns about the ability of a graphite moderated reactor being able to produce plutonium on industrial scale and for this reason the Manhattan Project continued the development of heavy water production facilities 114 An air cooled reactor the X 10 Graphite Reactor was built at the Clinton Engineer Works in Oak Ridge as part of a plutonium semiworks 115 followed by larger water cooled production reactors at the Hanford Site in Washington state 116 Enough plutonium was produced for an atomic bomb by July 1945 and for two more in August 117 A commemorative plaque was unveiled at Stagg Field on 2 December 1952 the occasion of the tenth anniversary of CP 1 going critical 118 It read as follows On December 2 1942 man achieved here the first self sustaining chain reaction and thereby initiated the controlled release of nuclear energy 119 The plaque was saved when the West Stands were demolished in August 1957 120 The site of CP 1 was designated as a National Historic Landmark on 18 February 1965 2 When the National Register of Historic Places was created in 1966 it was immediately added to that as well 1 The site was also named a Chicago Landmark on 27 October 1971 3 Today the site of the old Stagg Field is occupied by the university s Regenstein Library which was opened in 1970 and the Joe and Rika Mansueto Library which was opened in 2011 121 A Henry Moore sculpture Nuclear Energy stands in a small quadrangle outside the Regenstein Library on the former site of the west viewing stands rackets court 2 It was dedicated on 2 December 1967 to commemorate the 25th anniversary of CP 1 going critical The commemorative plaques from 1952 1965 and 1967 are nearby 119 A graphite block from CP 1 can be seen at the Bradbury Science Museum in Los Alamos New Mexico another is on display at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago 122 On 2 December 2017 the 75th anniversary the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in restoring a research graphite pile similar in design to Chicago Pile 1 ceremonially inserted the final uranium slugs 123 Notes edit The Chicago Pile 1 Pioneers were Harold Agnew Herbert L Anderson Wayne Arnold Hugh M Barton Thomas Brill Robert F Christy Arthur H Compton Enrico Fermi Richard J Fox Stewart Fox Carl C Gamertsfelder Alvin C Graves Crawford Greenewalt Norman Hilberry David L Hill William H Hinch Robert E Johnson W R Kanne August C Knuth Phillip Grant Koontz Herbert E Kubitschek Harold V Lichtenberger George M Maronde Anthony J Matz George Miller George D Monk Henry P Newson Robert G Nobles Warren E Nyer Wilcox P Overbeck J Howard Parsons Gerard S Pawlicki Theodore Petry David P Rudolph Leon Sayvetz Leo Seren Louis Slotin Frank Spedding William J Sturm Leo Szilard Albert Wattenberg Richard J Watts George Weil Eugene P Wigner Marvin H Wilkening Volney C Bill Wilson Leona Woods and Walter Zinn 91 a b c National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service 9 July 2010 a b c d Site of the First Self Sustaining Nuclear Reaction National Historic Landmark Summary Listing National Park Service Archived from the original on 5 April 2015 Retrieved 26 July 2013 a b Site of the First Self Sustaining Controlled Nuclear Chain Reaction City of Chicago Retrieved 26 July 2013 Fermi 1982 p 24 Olander Arne The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1956 Award Ceremony Speech The Nobel Foundation Retrieved 23 September 2015 Rhodes 1986 pp 13 28 Wellerstein Alex 16 May 2014 Szilard s chain reaction visionary or crank Restricted Data Retrieved 23 September 2015 Szilard Leo Improvements in or relating to the transmutation of chemical elements British patent number GB630726 filed 28 June 1934 published 30 March 1936 Retrieved 23 September 2015 Rhodes 1986 pp 251 254 Hahn O Strassmann F 1939 Uber den Nachweis und das Verhalten der bei der Bestrahlung des Urans mittels Neutronen entstehenden Erdalkalimetalle On the detection and characteristics of the alkaline earth metals formed by irradiation of uranium with neutrons Die Naturwissenschaften 27 1 11 15 Bibcode 1939NW 27 11H doi 10 1007 BF01488241 S2CID 5920336 Rhodes 1986 pp 256 263 Meitner Lise Frisch O R 1939 Disintegration of Uranium by Neutrons a New Type of Nuclear Reaction Nature 143 3615 239 240 Bibcode 1939Natur 143 239M doi 10 1038 143239a0 S2CID 4113262 Rhodes 1986 pp 267 271 Lanouette amp Silard 1992 p 148 Brasch A Lange F Waly A Banks T E Chalmers T A Szilard Leo Hopwood F L 8 December 1934 Liberation of Neutrons from Beryllium by X Rays Radioactivity Induced by Means of Electron Tubes Nature 134 3397 880 Bibcode 1934Natur 134 880B doi 10 1038 134880a0 ISSN 0028 0836 S2CID 4106665 Lanouette amp Silard 1992 pp 172 173 Anderson H L Booth E T Dunning J R Fermi E Glasoe G N Slack F G 1939 The Fission of Uranium Physical Review 55 5 511 512 Bibcode 1939PhRv 55 511A doi 10 1103 physrev 55 511 2 Rhodes 1986 pp 267 270 Anderson H L Fermi E Hanstein H 16 March 1939 Production of Neutrons in Uranium Bombarded by Neutrons Physical Review 55 8 797 798 Bibcode 1939PhRv 55 797A doi 10 1103 PhysRev 55 797 2 Anderson H L April 1973 Early Days of Chain Reaction Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists Educational Foundation for Nuclear Science Inc 29 4 8 12 Bibcode 1973BuAtS 29d 8A doi 10 1080 00963402 1973 11455466 Lanouette amp Silard 1992 pp 182 183 Lanouette amp Silard 1992 pp 186 187 Lanouette amp Silard 1992 p 227 Alfred O C Nier American Physical Society Retrieved 4 December 2016 Bonolis 2001 pp 347 352 Amaldi 2001 pp 153 156 a b Lanouette amp Silard 1992 pp 194 195 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 p 28 Anderson H Fermi E Szilard L 1 August 1939 Neutron Production and Absorption in Uranium Physical Review 56 3 284 286 Bibcode 1939PhRv 56 284A doi 10 1103 PhysRev 56 284 a b International Atomic Energy Agency Nuclear Data for Safeguards www nds iaea org Retrieved 16 August 2016 a b c Weinberg Alvin 1994a Herbert G MacPherson Memorial Tributes National Academy of Engineering Press 46 7 143 147 Bibcode 1993PhT 46g 103W doi 10 1063 1 2808987 ISSN 1075 8844 a b Bethe Hans A 2000 The German Uranium Project Physics Today American Institute of Physics 53 7 34 36 Bibcode 2000PhT 53g 34B doi 10 1063 1 1292473 Currie Hamister amp MacPherson 1955 Eatherly W P 1981 Nuclear graphite the first years Journal of Nuclear Materials 100 1 3 55 63 Bibcode 1981JNuM 100 55E doi 10 1016 0022 3115 81 90519 5 Salvetti 2001 pp 177 203 Nightingale 1962 p 4 Einstein s Letter to Franklin D Roosevelt Atomic Archive Retrieved 20 December 2015 Pa this requires action The Atomic Heritage Foundation Archived from the original on 29 October 2012 Retrieved 26 May 2007 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 19 21 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 36 38 a b Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 46 49 a b Anderson 1975 p 82 Salvetti 2001 pp 192 193 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 50 51 a b Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 54 55 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 180 181 a b c Weinberg 1994 p 15 a b Rhodes 1986 pp 396 397 Segre 1970 p 116 Anderson 1975 p 86 Embrey 1970 p 385 Anderson 1975 pp 86 87 a b Rhodes 1986 pp 399 400 Anderson 1975 p 88 Rhodes 1986 pp 400 401 a b Rhodes 1986 p 401 Zug 2003 pp 134 135 Bearak Barry 16 September 2011 Where Football and Higher Education Mix The New York Times Retrieved 2 December 2015 Libby 1979 p 86 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 74 75 Rhodes 1986 pp 427 428 Rhodes 1986 p 431 a b Anderson 1975 p 91 Rhodes 1986 p 429 Libby 1979 p 85 Rhodes 1986 p 430 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 65 66 83 88 Jones 1985 pp 67 68 a b c d e Site A at Red Gate Woods amp The World s First Nuclear Reactor Forest Preserves of Cook County October 2013 Retrieved 26 November 2015 Jones 1985 pp 71 72 111 114 a b c d Compton 1956 pp 136 137 a b c d Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 107 109 Weinberg 1994 p 17 a b c Compton 1956 pp 137 138 Groves 1962 p 53 Nichols 1987 pp 66 Salvetti 2001 p 197 a b c d e Rhodes 1986 p 433 Rhodes 1986 p 436 a b Anderson 1975 pp 91 92 a b c Holl Hewlett amp Harris 1997 p 16 How the first chain reaction changed science University of Chicago 10 December 2012 Retrieved 22 November 2015 Chapter 1 Wartime Laboratory ORNL Review 25 3 amp 4 2002 ISSN 0048 1262 Archived from the original on 25 August 2009 Retrieved 22 March 2016 Libby 1979 p 119 Rhodes 1986 p 434 Frontiers Research Highlights 1946 1996 PDF Argonne National Laboratory 1996 p 11 Archived from the original PDF on 17 May 2013 Retrieved 23 March 2013 Walsh J 1981 A Manhattan Project Postscript PDF Science 212 4501 1369 1371 Bibcode 1981Sci 212 1369W doi 10 1126 science 212 4501 1369 PMID 17746246 Anderson 1975 p 93 Fermi Enrico 1952 Experimental Production of a Divergent Chain Reaction American Journal of Physics 20 9 536 558 Bibcode 1952AmJPh 20 536F doi 10 1119 1 1933322 ISSN 0002 9505 Holl Hewlett amp Harris 1997 pp 16 17 a b The Chicago Pile 1 Pioneers Argonne s Nuclear Science and Technology Legacy Argonne National Laboratory Retrieved 28 November 2015 Groves 1962 p 54 a b c d e CP 1 Goes Critical Department of Energy Archived from the original on 22 November 2010 a b c d Libby 1979 pp 120 123 Allardice amp Trapnell 1982 p 14 George Weil from activator to activist PDF New Scientist 56 822 530 531 30 November 1972 ISSN 0262 4079 Retrieved 25 March 2016 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 p 174 Rhodes 1986 p 440 Anderson 1975 p 95 The Italian Navigator Lands Argonne s Nuclear Science and Technology Legacy Argonne National Laboratory 10 July 2012 Retrieved 26 July 2013 Manhattan District 1947 p 3 9 Holl Hewlett amp Harris 1997 p 23 Early Exploration CP 1 Chicago Pile 1 Reactor Argonne s Nuclear Science and Technology Legacy Argonne National Laboratory 21 May 2013 Retrieved 26 July 2013 Promethean Boldness Argonne s Nuclear Science and Technology Legacy Argonne National Laboratory 10 July 2012 Retrieved 26 July 2013 Manhattan District 1947 p 3 13 a b Holl Hewlett amp Harris 1997 p 428 a b Fermi Enrico 1946 The Development of the first chain reaction pile Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 90 1 20 24 JSTOR 3301034 McNear Claire 5 March 2009 The Way Things Work Nuclear waste The Chicago Maroon Retrieved 28 November 2015 Wattenberg 1975 p 123 Enrico Fermi Nuclear Fission US Patent No 2 708 656 Inducted in 1976 National Inventors Hall of Fame Retrieved 6 October 2019 Leo Szilard Nuclear Fission US Patent No 2 708 656 Inducted in 1996 National Inventors Hall of Fame Retrieved 11 September 2020 Hogerton 1970 p 4 Holl Hewlett amp Harris 1997 p 47 Jones 1985 pp 191 192 Jones 1985 pp 204 205 Jones 1985 pp 210 212 Jones 1985 pp 222 223 U of C to Raze Stagg Field s Atomic Cradle Chicago Tribune 26 July 1957 Retrieved 28 November 2015 a b Site of the Fermi s Atomic Pile First Nuclear Reactor on YouTube Remove Nuclear Site Plaque Chicago Tribune 16 August 1957 Retrieved 28 November 2015 Stagg Field Mansueto Library University of Chicago Retrieved 28 November 2015 First Hand Recollections of the First Self Sustaining Chain Reaction Department of Energy Archived from the original on 27 March 2019 Retrieved 23 September 2015 Milestone for new LEU research reactor fuel World Nuclear News 22 December 2017 Retrieved 29 December 2017 References editAllardice Corbin Trapnell Edward R December 1982 The First Pile The First Reactor PDF Oak Ridge Tennessee United States Atomic Energy Commission Division of Technical Information pp 1 21 OCLC 22115 Retrieved 27 May 2017 Amaldi Ugo 2001 Nuclear Physics from the Nineteen Thirties to the Present Day In Bernardini C Bonolis Luisa eds Enrico Fermi His Work and Legacy Bologna Societa Italiana di Fisica Springer pp 151 176 ISBN 978 88 7438 015 2 OCLC 56686431 Anderson Herbert L 1975 Assisting Fermi In Wilson Jane ed All In Our Time The Reminiscences of Twelve Nuclear Pioneers Chicago Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists pp 66 104 OCLC 1982052 Bonolis Luisa 2001 Enrico Fermi s Scientific Work In Bernardini C Bonolis Luisa eds Enrico Fermi His Work and Legacy Bologna Societa Italiana di Fisica Springer pp 314 394 ISBN 978 88 7438 015 2 OCLC 56686431 Compton Arthur 1956 Atomic Quest New York Oxford University Press OCLC 173307 Currie L M Hamister V C MacPherson H G 1955 The Production and Properties of Graphite for Reactors National Carbon Company OCLC 349979 Embrey Lee Anna 1970 George Braxton Pegram 1876 1958 PDF Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences 41 357 407 Retrieved 23 November 2015 Fermi Enrico December 1982 Fermi s Own Story The First Reactor PDF Oak Ridge Tennessee United States Atomic Energy Commission Division of Technical Information pp 22 26 OCLC 22115 Retrieved 27 May 2017 Groves Leslie 1962 Now It Can Be Told The Story of the Manhattan Project New York Harper ISBN 978 0 306 70738 4 OCLC 537684 Hewlett Richard G Anderson Oscar E 1962 The New World 1939 1946 PDF University Park Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 978 0 520 07186 5 OCLC 637004643 Retrieved 26 March 2013 Hogerton Hohn F 1970 Nuclear Reactors PDF The understanding the atomic series Oak Ridge Tennessee U S Atomic Energy Commission OCLC 108834 Retrieved 6 October 2019 Holl Jack M Hewlett Richard G Harris Ruth R 1997 Argonne National Laboratory 1946 96 University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 02341 5 Jones Vincent 1985 Manhattan The Army and the Atomic Bomb Washington D C United States Army Center of Military History OCLC 10913875 Lanouette William Silard Bela 1992 Genius in the Shadows A Biography of Leo Szilard The Man Behind The Bomb New York Skyhorse Publishing ISBN 978 1 62636 023 5 OCLC 25508555 Libby Leona Marshall 1979 The Uranium People New York Crane Russak ISBN 978 0 8448 1300 4 OCLC 4665032 Manhattan District 1947 Manhattan District History Book IV Pile Project X 10 Volume 2 Research Part 1 Metallurgical Laboratory PDF Washington D C Manhattan District Nichols Kenneth D 1987 The Road to Trinity A Personal Account of How America s Nuclear Policies Were Made New York William Morrow and Company ISBN 978 0 688 06910 0 OCLC 15223648 Nightingale R E 1962 Graphite in the Nuclear Industry In Nightingale R E ed Nuclear Graphite Academic Press ISBN 978 1 4832 5848 5 OCLC 747492 Rhodes Richard 1986 The Making of the Atomic Bomb London Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 671 44133 3 Salvetti Carlo 2001 The Birth of Nuclear Energy Fermi s Pile In Bernardini C Bonolis Luisa eds Enrico Fermi His Work and Legacy Bologna Societa Italiana di Fisica Springer pp 177 203 ISBN 978 88 7438 015 2 OCLC 56686431 Segre Emilio 1970 Enrico Fermi Physicist Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 74473 5 OCLC 118467 Wattenberg Albert 1975 Present at Creation In Wilson Jane ed All In Our Time The Reminiscences of Twelve Nuclear Pioneers Chicago Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists pp 105 123 OCLC 1982052 Weinberg Alvin 1994 The First Nuclear Era The Life and Times of a Technological Fixer New York AIP Press ISBN 978 1 56396 358 2 Zug J 2003 Squash A History of the Game New York Scribner ISBN 978 0 7432 2990 6 OCLC 52079735 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chicago Pile 1 The Day Tomorrow Began The Story of Chicago Pile 1 the First Atomic Pile on YouTube AEC Video 1967 Photos of CP 1 Archived 27 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine The University of Chicago Library Archive Includes photos and sketches of CP 1 Video of west stands of Stagg Field Institute for the Study of Metals Metallurgical Laboratory Enrico Fermi and an active experiment using CP 1 The First Pile 11 page story about CP 1 First Hand Recollections of the First Self Sustaining Chain Reaction Department of Energy Archived from the original on 27 March 2019 Retrieved 23 September 2015 Video of two of the last surviving CP 1 pioneers Harold Agnew and Warren Nyer Audio files of Fermi recounting the success of the reactor on the 10th anniversary in 1952 Portals nbsp Chicago nbsp History of Science nbsp National Register of Historic Places nbsp Nuclear technology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chicago Pile 1 amp oldid 1206438734, 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