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K-25

35°55′56″N 84°23′42″W / 35.93222°N 84.39500°W / 35.93222; -84.39500

The K-25 building of the Oak Ridge Gaseous Diffusion Plant aerial view, looking southeast. The mile-long building, in the shape of a "U", was completely demolished in 2013.

K-25 was the codename given by the Manhattan Project to the program to produce enriched uranium for atomic bombs using the gaseous diffusion method. Originally the codename for the product, over time it came to refer to the project, the production facility located at the Clinton Engineer Works in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, the main gaseous diffusion building, and ultimately the site. When it was built in 1944, the four-story K-25 gaseous diffusion plant was the world's largest building, comprising over 5,264,000 square feet (489,000 m2)[1] of floor space and a volume of 97,500,000 cubic feet (2,760,000 m3).

Construction of the K-25 facility was undertaken by J. A. Jones Construction. At the height of construction, over 25,000 workers were employed on the site. Gaseous diffusion was but one of three enrichment technologies used by the Manhattan Project. Slightly enriched product from the S-50 thermal diffusion plant was fed into the K-25 gaseous diffusion plant. Its product in turn was fed into the Y-12 electromagnetic plant. The enriched uranium was used in the Little Boy atomic bomb used in the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. In 1946, the K-25 gaseous diffusion plant became capable of producing highly enriched product.

After the war, four more gaseous diffusion plants named K-27, K-29, K-31 and K-33 were added to the site. The K-25 site was renamed the Oak Ridge Gaseous Diffusion Plant in 1955. Production of enriched uranium ended in 1964, and gaseous diffusion finally ceased on the site on 27 August 1985. The Oak Ridge Gaseous Diffusion Plant was renamed the Oak Ridge K-25 Site in 1989, and the East Tennessee Technology Park in 1996. Demolition of all five gaseous diffusion plants was completed in February 2017.

Background edit

The discovery of the neutron by James Chadwick in 1932,[2] followed by that of nuclear fission in uranium by the German chemists Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann in 1938,[3] and its theoretical explanation (and naming) by Lise Meitner and Otto Frisch soon after,[4] opened up the possibility of a controlled nuclear chain reaction with uranium. At the Pupin Laboratories at Columbia University, Enrico Fermi and Leo Szilard began exploring how this might be achieved.[2] Fears that a German atomic bomb project would develop atomic weapons first, especially among scientists who were refugees from Nazi Germany and other fascist countries, were expressed in the Einstein-Szilard letter to the President of the United States, Franklin D. Roosevelt. This prompted Roosevelt to initiate preliminary research in late 1939.[5]

Niels Bohr and John Archibald Wheeler applied the liquid drop model of the atomic nucleus to explain the mechanism of nuclear fission.[6] As the experimental physicists studied fission, they uncovered puzzling results. George Placzek asked Bohr why uranium seemed to fission with both fast and slow neutrons. Walking to a meeting with Wheeler, Bohr had an insight that the fission at low energies was due to the uranium-235 isotope, while at high energies it was mainly due to the far more abundant uranium-238 isotope.[7] The former makes up just 0.714 percent of the uranium atoms in natural uranium, about one in every 140;[8] natural uranium is 99.28 percent uranium-238. There is also a tiny amount of uranium-234, which accounts for just 0.006 percent.[9]

At Columbia, John R. Dunning believed this was the case, but Fermi was not so sure. The only way to settle this was to obtain a sample of uranium-235 and test it.[2] He got Alfred O. C. Nier from the University of Minnesota to prepare samples of uranium enriched in uranium-234, 235 and 238 using a mass spectrometer. These were ready in February 1940, and Dunning, Eugene T. Booth and Aristid von Grosse then carried out a series of experiments. They demonstrated that uranium-235 was indeed primarily responsible for fission with slow neutrons,[10] but were unable to determine precise neutron capture cross sections because their samples were not sufficiently enriched.[11][12][13]

At the University of Birmingham in Britain, the Australian physicist Mark Oliphant assigned two refugee physicists—Otto Frisch and Rudolf Peierls—the task of investigating the feasibility of an atomic bomb, ironically because their status as enemy aliens precluded their working on secret projects like radar.[14] Their March 1940 Frisch–Peierls memorandum indicated that the critical mass of uranium-235 was within an order of magnitude of 10 kilograms (22 lb), which was small enough to be carried by a bomber aircraft of the day.[15]

Gaseous diffusion edit

 
Gaseous diffusion uses semi-permeable membranes to separate enriched uranium.
 
Stages are connected together to form a cascade. A, B and C are pumps.

In April 1940, Jesse Beams, Ross Gunn, Fermi, Nier, Merle Tuve and Harold Urey had a meeting at the American Physical Society in Washington, D.C. At the time, the prospect of building an atomic bomb seemed dim, and even creating a chain reaction would likely require enriched uranium. They therefore recommended that research be conducted with the aim of developing the means to separate kilogram amounts of uranium-235.[16] At a lunch on 21 May 1940, George B. Kistiakowsky suggested the possibility of using gaseous diffusion.[17]

Gaseous diffusion is based on Graham's law, which states that the rate of effusion of a gas through a porous barrier is inversely proportional to the square root of the gas's molecular mass. In a container with a porous barrier containing a mixture of two gases, the lighter molecules will pass out of the container more rapidly than the heavier molecules. The gas leaving the container is slightly enriched in the lighter molecules, while the residual gas is slightly depleted.[18] A container wherein the enrichment process takes place through gaseous diffusion is called a diffuser.[19]

Gaseous diffusion had been used to separate isotopes before. Francis William Aston had used it to partially separate isotopes of neon in 1931, and Gustav Ludwig Hertz had improved on the method to almost completely separate neon by running it through a series of stages. In the United States, William D. Harkins had used it to separate chlorine. Kistiakowsky was familiar with the work of Charles G. Maier at the Bureau of Mines, who had also used the process to separate gases.[17]

Uranium hexafluoride (UF
6
) was the only known compound of uranium sufficiently volatile to be used in the gaseous diffusion process.[18] Before this could be done, the Special Alloyed Materials (SAM) Laboratories at Columbia University and the Kellex Corporation had to overcome formidable difficulties to develop a suitable barrier. Fortunately, fluorine consists of only a single natural isotope 19
F
, so that the 1 percent difference in molecular weights between 235
UF
6
and 238
UF
6
is due solely to the difference in weights of the uranium isotopes. For these reasons, UF
6
was the only choice as a feedstock for the gaseous diffusion process.[20] Uranium hexafluoride, a solid at room temperature, sublimes at 56.5 °C (133.7 °F) at 1 standard atmosphere (100 kPa).[21][22] Applying Graham's law to uranium hexafluoride:

 

where:

Rate1 is the rate of effusion of 235UF6.
Rate2 is the rate of effusion of 238UF6.
M1 is the molar mass of 235UF6 ≈ 235 + 6 × 19 = 349 g·mol−1
M2 is the molar mass of 238UF6 ≈ 238 + 6 × 19 = 352 g·mol−1

Uranium hexafluoride is a highly corrosive substance. It is an oxidant[23] and a Lewis acid which is able to bind to fluoride.[24] It reacts with water to form a solid compound, and is very difficult to handle on an industrial scale.[20]

Organization edit

Booth, Dunning and von Grosse investigated the gaseous diffusion process. In 1941, they were joined by Francis G. Slack from Vanderbilt University and Willard F. Libby from the University of California. In July 1941, an Office of Scientific Research and Development (OSRD) contract was awarded to Columbia University to study gaseous diffusion.[10][25] With the help of the mathematician Karl P. Cohen, they built a twelve-stage pilot gaseous diffusion plant at the Pupin Laboratories.[26] Initial tests showed that the stages were not as efficient as the theory would suggest;[27] they would need about 4,600 stages to enrich to 90 percent uranium-235.[18]

 
The Woolworth Building in Manhattan housed the offices of the Kellex Corporation and the Manhattan District's New York Area

A secret contract was awarded to M. W. Kellogg for engineering studies in July 1941.[10][25] This included the design and construction of a ten-stage pilot gaseous diffusion plant. On 14 December 1942, the Manhattan District, the US Army component of the Manhattan Project, as the effort to develop an atomic bomb became known, contracted Kellogg to design, build and operate a full-scale production plant. Unusually, the contract did not require any guarantees from Kellogg that it could actually accomplish this task. Because the scope of the project was not well defined, Kellogg and the Manhattan District agreed to defer any financial details to a later, cost-plus contract, which was executed in April 1944. Kellogg was then paid $2.5 million.[26]

For security reasons, the Army had Kellogg establish a wholly owned subsidiary, the Kellex Corporation, so the gaseous diffusion project could be kept separate from other company work.[26] "Kell" stood for "Kellogg" and "X" for secret.[28] Kellex operated as a self-contained and autonomous entity. Percival C. Keith, Kellogg's vice president of engineering,[28] was placed in charge of Kellex. He drew extensively on Kellogg to staff the new company, but also had to recruit staff from outside as well. Eventually, Kellex would have over 3,700 employees.[26]

Dunning remained in charge at Columbia until 1 May 1943, when the Manhattan District took over the contract from OSRD. By this time Slack's group had nearly 50 members. His was the largest group, and it was working on the most challenging problem: the design of a suitable barrier through which the gas could diffuse. Another 30 scientists and technicians were working in five other groups. Henry A. Boorse was responsible for the pumps; Booth for the cascade test units. Libby handled chemistry, Nier analytical work and Hugh C. Paxton, engineering support.[29] The Army reorganized the research effort at Columbia, which became the Special Alloyed Materials (SAM) Laboratories. Urey was put in charge, Dunning becoming head of one of its divisions.[26] It would remain this way until 1 March 1945, when the SAM Laboratories were taken over by Union Carbide.[30]

The expansion of the SAM Laboratories led to a search for more space. The Nash Garage Building at 3280 Broadway was purchased by Columbia University. Originally an automobile dealership, it was just a few blocks from the campus. Major Benjamin K. Hough Jr. was the Manhattan District's Columbia Area engineer, and he moved his offices here too.[26][31] Kellex was in the Woolworth Building at 233 Broadway in Lower Manhattan. In January 1943, Lieutenant Colonel James C. Stowers was appointed New York Area Engineer, with responsibility for the entire K-25 Project. His small staff, initially of 20 military and civilian personnel, but which gradually grew to over 70, was co-located in the Woolworth Building. The Manhattan District had its offices nearby at 270 Broadway until it moved to Oak Ridge, Tennessee, in August 1943.[26][31]

Codename edit

The codename "K-25" was a combination of the "K" from Kellex, and "25", a World War II-era code designation for uranium-235 (an isotope of element 92, mass number 235). The term was first used in Kellex internal reports for the end product, enriched uranium, in March 1943. By April 1943, the term "K-25 plant" was being used for the plant that created it. That month, the term "K-25 Project" was applied to the entire project to develop uranium enrichment using the gaseous diffusion process. When other "K-" buildings were added after the war, "K-25" became the name of the original, larger complex.[32][33]

Research and development edit

Diffusers edit

 
A gaseous diffusion cell, showing the diffuser

The highly corrosive nature of uranium hexafluoride presented several technological challenges. Pipes and fittings that it came into contact with had to be made of, or clad with nickel. This was fine for small objects, but impractical for the large diffusers, the tank-like containers that had to hold the gas under pressure. Nickel was a vital war material, and although the Manhattan Project could use its overriding priority to acquire it, making the diffusers out of solid nickel would deplete the national supply. The director of the Manhattan Project, Brigadier General Leslie R. Groves Jr., gave the contract to build the diffusers to Chrysler. In turn, its president, K. T. Keller assigned Carl Heussner, an expert in electroplating, the task of developing a process for electroplating such a large object. Senior Chrysler executives called this "Project X-100".[34][35]

Electroplating used one-thousandth of the nickel of a solid nickel diffuser. The SAM Laboratories had already attempted this and failed. Heussner experimented with a prototype in a building built within a building, and found that it could be done, so long as the series of pickling and scaling steps required were done without anything coming in contact with oxygen. Chrysler's entire factory at Lynch Road in Detroit was turned over to the manufacture of diffusers. The electroplating process required over 50,000 square feet (4,600 m2) of floor space, several thousand workers and a complicated air filtration system to ensure the nickel was not contaminated. By the war's end, Chrysler had built and shipped more than 3,500 diffusers.[34][35]

Pumps edit

The gaseous diffusion process required suitable pumps that had to meet stringent requirements. Like the diffusers, they had to resist corrosion from the uranium hexafluoride feed. Corrosion would not only damage the pumps, it would contaminate the feed. They could not afford any leakage of uranium hexafluoride, especially if it was already enriched, or of oil, which would react with the uranium hexafluoride. They had to pump at high rates, and handle a gas twelve times as dense as air. To meet these requirements, the SAM Laboratories chose to use centrifugal pumps. They were aware that the desired compression ratio of 2.3:1 to 3.2:1 was unusually high for this type of pump. For some purposes, a reciprocating pump would suffice,[36] and these were designed by Boorse at the SAM Laboratories, while Ingersoll Rand tackled the centrifugal pumps.[37]

In early 1943, Ingersoll Rand pulled out.[38] Keith approached the Clark Compressor Company and Worthington Pump and Machinery but they turned it down, saying it could not be done.[39] So Keith and Groves saw executives at Allis-Chalmers, who agreed to build a new factory to produce the pumps, even though the pump design was still uncertain. The SAM Laboratories came up with a design, and Westinghouse built some prototypes that were successfully tested. Then Judson Swearingen at the Elliott Company came up with a revolutionary and promising design that was mechanically stable with seals that would contain the gas. This design was manufactured by Allis-Chalmers.[38]

Barriers edit

Difficulties with the diffusers and pumps paled in significance beside those with the porous barrier. To work, the gaseous diffusion process required a barrier with microscopic holes, but not subject to plugging. It had to be extremely porous, but strong enough to handle the high pressures. And, like everything else, it had to resist corrosion from uranium hexafluoride. The latter criterion suggested a nickel barrier.[38] Foster C. Nix at the Bell Telephone Laboratories experimented with nickel powder, while Edward O. Norris at the C. O. Jelliff Manufacturing Corporation and Edward Adler at the City College of New York worked on a design with electroplated metallic nickel.[37] Norris was an English interior decorator, who had developed a very fine metal mesh for use with a spray gun.[40] Their design appeared too brittle and fragile for the proposed use, particularly on the higher stages of enrichment, but there was hope that this could be overcome.[41]

 
Setting up a process pump

In 1943, Urey brought in Hugh S. Taylor from Princeton University to look at the problem of a usable barrier. Libby made progress on understanding the chemistry of uranium hexafluoride, leading to ideas on how to prevent corrosion and plugging. Chemical researchers at the SAM Laboratories studied fluorocarbons, which resisted corrosion, and could be used as lubricants and coolants in the gaseous diffusion plant. Despite this progress, the K-25 Project was in serious trouble without a suitable barrier, and by August 1943 it was facing cancellation. On 13 August Groves informed the Military Policy Committee, the senior committee that steered the Manhattan Project, that gaseous diffusion enrichment in excess of fifty percent was probably infeasible, and the gaseous diffusion plant would be limited to producing product with a lower enrichment which could be fed into the calutrons of the Y-12 electromagnetic plant. Urey therefore began preparations to mass-produce the Norris-Adler barrier, despite its problems.[41]

Meanwhile, Union Carbide and Kellex had made researchers at the Bakelite Corporation, a subsidiary of Union Carbide, aware of Nix's unsuccessful efforts with powdered nickel barriers. To Frazier Groff and other researchers at Bakelite's laboratories in Bound Brook, New Jersey, it seemed that Nix was not taking advantage of the latest techniques, and they began their own development efforts. Both Bell and Bound Brook sent samples of their powdered nickel barriers to Taylor for evaluation, but he was unimpressed; neither had come up with a practical barrier. At Kellogg's laboratory in Jersey City, New Jersey, Clarence A. Johnson, who was aware of the steps taken by the SAM Laboratories to improve the Norris-Adler barrier, realized that they could also be taken with the Bakelite barrier. The result was a barrier better than either, although still short of what was required. At a meeting at Columbia with the Army in attendance on 20 October 1943, Keith proposed switching the development effort to the Johnson barrier. Urey balked at this, fearing this would destroy morale at the SAM Laboratories. The issue was put to Groves at a meeting on 3 November 1943, and he decided to pursue development of both the Johnson and the Norris-Adler barriers.[42]

Groves summoned British help, in the form of Wallace Akers and fifteen members of the British gaseous diffusion project, who would review the progress made thus far.[43] Their verdict was that while the new barrier was potentially superior, Keith's undertaking to build a new facility to produce the new barrier in just four months, produce all the barriers required in another four and have the production facility up and running in just twelve "would be something of a miraculous achievement".[44] On 16 January 1944, Groves ruled in favor of the Johnson barrier. Johnson built a pilot plant for the new process at the Nash Building. Taylor analyzed the sample barriers produced and pronounced only 5 percent of them to be of acceptable quality. Edward Mack Jr. created his own pilot plant at Schermerhorn Hall at Columbia, and Groves obtained 80 short tons (73 t) of nickel from the International Nickel Company. With plenty of nickel to work with, by April 1944, both pilot plants were producing barriers of acceptable quality 45 percent of the time.[45]

Construction edit

The site chosen was at the Clinton Engineer Works in Tennessee. The area was inspected by representatives of the Manhattan District, Kellex and Union Carbide on 18 January 1943. Consideration was also given to sites near the Shasta Dam in California and the Big Bend of the Columbia River in Washington state. The lower humidity of these areas made them more suitable for a gaseous diffusion plant, but the Clinton Engineer Works site was immediately available and otherwise suitable. Groves decided on the site in April 1943.[46]

Under the contract, Kellex had responsibility not just for the design and engineering of the K-25 plant, but for its construction as well. The prime construction contractor was J. A. Jones Construction from Charlotte, North Carolina. It had impressed Groves with its work on several major Army construction projects,[47] such as Camp Shelby, Mississippi.[48] There were more than sixty subcontractors.[49] Kellex engaged another construction company, Ford, Bacon & Davis, to build the fluorine and nitrogen facilities, and the conditioning plant.[49] Construction work was initially the responsibility of Lieutenant Colonel Warren George, the Chief of the Construction Division of the Clinton Engineer Works. Major W. P. Cornelius became the construction officer responsible for K-25 works on 31 July 1943.[50] He was answerable to Stowers back in Manhattan.[49] He became Chief of the Construction Division on 1 March 1946.[50] J. J. Allison was the resident engineer from Kellex, and Edwin L. Jones, the General Manager of J. A. Jones.[51]

Power plant edit

 
K-25 power plant (the building with three smoke stacks) in 1945. The dark building behind it is the S-50 thermal diffusion plant.

Construction began before completion of the design for the gaseous diffusion process. Because of the large amount of electric power the K-25 plant was expected to consume, it was decided to provide it with its own electric power plant. While the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) believed it could supply the Clinton Engineer Works' needs, there was unease about relying on a single supplier when a power failure could cost the gaseous diffusion plant weeks of work, and the lines to TVA could be sabotaged. A local plant was more secure. The Kellex engineers were also attracted to the idea of being able to generate the variable frequency current required by the gaseous diffusion process without complicated transformers.[52]

A site was chosen for this on the western edge of the Clinton Engineer Works site where it could draw cold water from the Clinch River and discharge warm water into Poplar Creek without affecting the inflow. Groves approved this location on 3 May 1943.[53] Surveying began on the power plant site on 31 May 1943, and J. A. Jones started construction work the following day. Because the bedrock was 35 to 40 feet (11 to 12 m) below the surface, the power plant was supported on 40 concrete-filled caissons.[54] Installation of the first boiler commenced in October 1943.[55] Construction work was complete by late September.[56] To prevent sabotage, the power plant was connected to the gaseous diffusion plant by an underground conduit. Despite this, there was one act of sabotage, in which a nail was driven through the electric cable. The culprit was never found, but was considered more likely to be a disgruntled employee than an Axis spy.[47]

Electric power in the United States was generated at 60 hertz; the power house was able to generate variable frequencies between 45 and 60 hertz, and constant frequencies of 60 and 120 hertz. This capability was not ultimately required, and all but one of the K-25 systems ran on a constant 60 hertz, the exception using a constant 120 hertz.[55] The first coal-fired boiler was started on 7 April 1944, followed by the second on 14 July 1944 and the third on 2 November 1944.[56] Each produced 750,000 pounds (340,000 kg) of steam an hour at a pressure of 1,325 pounds per square inch (9,140 kPa) and a temperature of 935 °F (502 °C).[55] To obtain the fourteen turbine generators needed, Groves had to use the Manhattan Project's priority to overrule Julius Albert Krug, the director of the Office of War Utilities.[57] The turbine generators had a combined output of 238,000 kilowatts. The power plant could also receive power from TVA. It was decommissioned in the 1960s and demolished in 1995.[55]

Gaseous diffusion plant edit

A site for the K-25 facility was chosen near the high school of the now-abandoned town of Wheat. As the dimensions of the K-25 facility became more apparent, it was decided to move it to a larger site near Poplar Creek, closer to the power plant. This site was approved on 24 June 1943.[53] Considerable work was required to prepare the site. Existing roads in the area were improved to take heavy traffic. A new 5.1-mile (8.2 km) road was built to connect the site to US Route 70, and another, 5 miles (8.0 km) long, to connect with Tennessee State Route 61. An old ferry over the Clinch River was upgraded, and then replaced with a 360-foot (110 m) bridge in December 1943. A 10.7-mile (17.2 km) railroad spur was run from Blair, Tennessee, to the K-25 site. Some 12.9 miles (20.8 km) of sidings were also provided. The first carload of freight traversed the line on 18 September 1943.[58]

 
K-25 under construction

It was initially intended that the construction workers should live off-site, but the poor condition of the roads and a shortage of accommodations in the area made commuting long and difficult, and in turn made it difficult to find and retain workers. Construction workers therefore came to be housed in large hutment and trailer camps. The J. A. Jones camp for K-25 workers, known as Happy Valley,[59] held 15,000 people. This required 8 dormitories, 17 barracks, 1,590 hutments, 1,153 trailers and 100 Victory Houses.[60] A pumping station was built to supply drinking water from the Clinch River, along with a water treatment plant.[61] Amenities included a school, eight cafeterias, a bakery, theater, three recreation halls, a warehouse and a cold storage plant.[60] Ford, Bacon & Davis established a smaller camp for 2,100 people.[60] Responsibility for the camps was transferred to the Roane-Anderson Company on 25 January 1946, and the school was transferred to district control in March 1946.[62]

Work began on the 130-acre (53 ha) main facility area on 20 October 1943. Although generally flat, some 3,500,000 cubic yards (2,700,000 m3) of soil and rock had to be excavated from areas up to 46 feet (14 m) high, and six major areas had to be filled in, to a maximum depth of 23.5 feet (7.2 m). Normally buildings containing complicated heavy machinery would rest on concrete columns down to the bedrock, but this would have required thousands of columns of different length. To save time soil compaction was used instead. Layers were laid down and compacted with sheepsfoot rollers in the areas that had to be filled in, and the footings were laid over compacted soil in the low-lying areas and the undisturbed soil in the areas that had been excavated. Activities overlapped, so concrete pouring began while grading was still going on.[63][64] Cranes started lifting the steel frames into place on 19 January 1944.[65]

 
K-25 under construction

Kellex's design for the main process building of K-25 called for a four-story U-shaped structure 0.5 miles (0.80 km) long containing 51 main process buildings and 3 purge cascade buildings.[65] These were divided into nine sections. Within these were cells of six stages. The cells could be operated independently, or consecutively, within a section. Similarly, the sections could be operated separately or as part of a single cascade.[66] When completed, there were 2,892 stages.[67] The basement housed the auxiliary equipment, such as the transformers, switch gears, and air conditioning systems. The ground floor contained the cells. The third level contained the piping. The fourth floor was the operating floor, which contained the control room, and the hundreds of instrument panels. From here, the operators monitored the process.[68] The first section was ready for test runs on 17 April 1944, although the barriers were not yet ready to be installed.[64]

The main process building surpassed The Pentagon as the largest building in the world,[68] with a floor area of 5,264,000 square feet (489,000 m2), and an enclosed volume of 97,500,000 cubic feet (2,760,000 m3).[65] Construction required 200,000 cubic yards (150,000 m3) of concrete, and 100 miles (160 km) of gas pipes.[69] Because uranium hexafluoride corrodes steel, and steel piping had to be coated in nickel, smaller pipes were made of copper or monel.[68] The equipment operated under vacuum pressures, so plumbing had to be air tight. Special efforts were made to create as clean an environment as possible to areas where piping or fixtures were being installed. J. A. Jones established a special cleanliness unit on 18 April 1944. Buildings were completely sealed off, air was filtered, and all cleaning was with vacuum cleaners and mopping. Workers wore white lintless gloves.[70] At the peak of construction activity in May 1945, 25,266 people were employed on the site.[71]

Other buildings edit

Although by far the largest, the main process building (K-300) was but one of many that made up the facility. There was a conditioning building (K-1401), where piping and equipment were cleaned prior to installation. A feed purification building (K-101), was built to remove impurities from the uranium hexafluoride, but never operated as such because the suppliers provided feed good enough to be fed into the gaseous diffusion process. The three-story surge and waste removal building (K-601) processed the "tail" stream of depleted uranium hexafluoride. The air conditioning building (K-1401) provided 76,500 cubic feet (2,170 m3) per minute of clean, dry air. K-1201 compressed the air. The nitrogen plant (K-1408) provided gas for use as a pump sealant and to protect equipment from moist air.[68][72][73]

 
The K-1001 administration building provided 2 acres (0.81 ha) of office space

The fluorine generating plant (K-1300) generated, bottled and stored fluorine.[72] It had not been in great demand before the war, and Kellex and the Manhattan District considered four different processes for large-scale production. A process developed by the Hooker Chemical Company was chosen. Owing to the hazardous nature of fluorine, it was decided that shipping it across the United States was inadvisable, and it should be manufactured on site at the Clinton Engineer Works.[74] Two pump houses (K-801 and K-802) and two cooling towers (H-801 and H-802) provided 135,000,000 US gallons (510 Ml) of cooling water per day for the motors and compressors.[68][72][73]

The administration building (K-1001) provided 2 acres (0.81 ha) of office space. A laboratory building (K-1401) contained facilities for testing and analyzing feed and product. Five drum warehouses (K-1025-A to -E) had 4,300 square feet (400 m2) of floor space to store drums of uranium hexafluoride. Originally this was on the K-27 site. The buildings were moved on a truck to make way for K-27. There were also warehouses for general stores (K-1035), spare parts (K-1036) and equipment (K-1037). A cafeteria (K-1002) provided meal facilities, including a segregated lunch room for African Americans. There were three changing houses (K-1008-A, B and C), a dispensary (K-1003), an instrument repair building (K-1024), and a fire station (K-1021).[68][72]

In mid-January 1945, Kellex proposed an extension to K-25 to allow product enrichment of up to 85 percent. Groves initially approved this, but later canceled it in favor of a 540-stage side feed unit, which became known as K-27, which could process a slightly enriched product. This could then be fed into K-25 or the calutrons at the Y-12. Kellex estimated that using the enriched feed from K-27 could lift the output from K-25 from 35 to 60 percent uranium-235.[64] Construction started at K-27 on 3 April 1945,[75] and was completed in December 1945.[68] The construction work was expedited by making it "virtually a Chinese copy" of a section of K-25.[76] By 31 December 1946, when the Manhattan Project ended, 110,048,961 man-hours of construction work had been performed at the K-25 site.[51] The total cost, including that of K-27, was $479,589,999 (equivalent to $6.44 billion in 2023[77]).[78]

The water tower (K-1206-F) was a 382-foot (116 m) structure that held 400,000 US gallons (1,500,000 L) of water. It was built in 1958 by the Chicago Bridge and Iron Company and served as reservoir for the fire suppression system. Over 1.5 million pounds (680 tonnes) of steel was used in its construction. It operated until 3 June 2013, when the valves were turned off. It was then drained and disconnected, and was taken out of service on 15 July. On 3 August 2013, it was demolished with explosives.[79]

Operations edit

 
The K-25 control room

The preliminary specification for the K-25 plant in March 1943 called for it to produce 1 kilogram (2.2 lb) a day of product that was 90 percent uranium-235.[80] As the practical difficulties were realized, this target was reduced to 36 percent. On the other hand, the cascade design meant construction did not need to be complete before the plant started operating.[81] In August 1943, Kellex submitted a schedule that called for a capability to produce material enriched to 5 percent uranium-235 by 1 June 1945, 15 percent by 1 July 1945, and 36 percent by 23 August 1945.[82] This schedule was revised in August 1944 to 0.9 percent by 1 January 1945, 5 percent by 10 June 1945, 15 percent by 1 August 1945, 23 percent by 13 September 1945, and 36 percent as soon as possible after that.[83]

A meeting between the Manhattan District and Kellogg on 12 December 1942 recommended the K-25 plant be operated by Union Carbide. This would be through a wholly owned subsidiary, Carbon and Carbide Chemicals. A cost-plus-fixed-fee contract was signed on 18 January 1943, setting the fee at $75,000 per month. This was later increased to $96,000 a month to operate both K-25 and K-27.[84] Union Carbide did not wish to be the sole operator of the facility. Union Carbide suggested the conditioning plant be built and operated by Ford, Bacon & Davis. The Manhattan District found this acceptable, and a cost-plus-fixed-fee contract was negotiated with a fee of $216,000 for services up to the end of June 1945. The contract was terminated early on 1 May 1945, when Union Carbide took over the plant. Ford, Bacon & Davis was therefore paid $202,000.[85] The other exception was the fluorine plant. Hooker Chemical was asked to supervise its construction of the fluorine plant, and initially to operate it for a fixed fee of $24,500. The plant was turned over to Union Carbide on 1 February 1945.[74]

 
A worker on a bicycle in the K-25 operating level

Part of the K-300 complex was taken over by Union Carbide in August 1944, and was run as a pilot plant, training operators and developing procedures, using nitrogen instead of uranium hexafluoride until October 1944, and then perfluoroheptane until April 1945.[84] The design of the gaseous diffusion plant allowed for it to be completed in sections, and for these to be put into operation while work continued on the others. J. A. Jones completed the first 60 stages by the end of 1944. Before each stage was accepted, it underwent tests by J. A. Jones, Carbide and Carbon and SAM Laboratories technicians to verify that the equipment was working and there were no leaks. Between four and six hundred people devoted eight months to this testing. Perfluoroheptane was used as a test fluid until February 1945, when it was decided to use uranium hexafluoride despite its corrosive nature.[86]

The Manhattan District engineer, Colonel Kenneth Nichols, placed Major John J. Moran in charge of production at K-25. Production commenced in February 1945,[86] and the first product was shipped to the calutrons in March.[87] By April, the gaseous diffusion plant was producing 1.1 percent product.[88] It was then decided that instead of processing uranium hexafluoride feed from the Harshaw Chemical Company, the gaseous diffusion plant would take the product of the S-50 thermal diffusion plant, with an average enrichment of about 0.85 percent.[89] Product enrichment continued to improve, as more stages came online and performed better than anticipated. In June product was being enriched to 7 percent; by September it was 23 percent.[88] The S-50 plant ceased operation on 9 September,[90] and Kellex transferred the last unit to Union Carbide on 11 September 1945.[78] Highly enriched uranium was used in the Little Boy atomic bomb used in the bombing of Hiroshima on 6 August 1945.[91]

 
Air compressors and water pumps in the K-1101 air conditioning building

With the end of the war in August 1945, the Manhattan Project's priority shifted from speed to economy and efficiency. The cascades were configurable, so they could produce a large amount of slightly enriched product by running them in parallel, or a small amount of highly enriched product through running them in series. By early 1946, with K-27 in operation, the facility was producing 3.6 kilograms (7.9 lb) per day, enriched to 30 percent. The next step was to increase the enrichment further to 60 percent. This was achieved on 20 July 1946. This presented a problem, because Y-12 was not equipped to handle feed that was so highly enriched, but the Los Alamos Laboratory required 95 percent. For a time, product was mixed with feed to reduce the enrichment to 30 percent. Taking the concentration up to 95 percent raised safety concerns, as there was the risk of a criticality accident.[92]

After some deliberation, with opinions sought and obtained from Percival Keith, Norris Bradbury, Darol Froman, Elmer E. Kirkpatrick, Kenneth Nichols and Edward Teller,[93] it was decided that this could be done safely if appropriate precautions were taken. On 28 November 1946, the K-25 plant began producing 94 percent product. At this point, they ran into a serious flaw in the gaseous diffusion concept: enrichment in uranium-235 also enriched the product in the unwanted and fairly useless uranium-234, making it difficult to raise the enrichment to 95 percent. On 6 December 1946, production was dropped back to a steady 2.56 kilograms (5.6 lb) per day enriched to 93.7 percent uranium-235, along with 1.9 percent uranium-234. This was regarded as a satisfactory product by the Los Alamos Laboratory, so on 26 December 1946 enrichment activity at Y-12 was curtailed. The Manhattan Project ended a few days later. Responsibility for the K-25 facility then passed to the new Atomic Energy Commission on 1 January 1947.[94]

Workers at the plant were represented by the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers International Union (OCAW). [95]

Closure and demolition edit

 
The K-25 complex in 2006

K-25 became a prototype for other gaseous diffusion facilities established in the early post-war years. The first of these was the 374,000-square-foot (34,700 m2) K-27 completed in September 1945. It was followed by the 15-acre (6.1 ha) K-29 in 1951, the 20-acre (8.1 ha) K-31 in 1951 and the 32-acre (13 ha) K-33 in 1954.[96] Further gaseous diffusion facilities were built at Paducah, Kentucky, in 1952,[97] and Portsmouth, Ohio, in 1954.[98] The K-25 plant was renamed the Oak Ridge Gaseous Diffusion Plant in 1955.[99]

Today, uranium isotope separation is usually done by the more energy-efficient ultra centrifuge process,[100] developed in the Soviet Union after World War II by Soviet and captured German engineers working in detention.[101] The centrifuge process was the first isotope separation method considered for the Manhattan project, but was abandoned due to technical challenges early in the project. When German scientists and engineers were released from Soviet captivity in the mid-1950s the West became aware of the ultra centrifuge design and began shifting uranium enrichment to this much more efficient process. As centrifuge technology advanced, it became possible to carry out uranium enrichment on a smaller scale without the vast resources that were necessary to build and operate 1940s and 1950s "K" and "Y" style separation plants, a development which had the effect of increasing nuclear proliferation concerns.[102]

 
Demolition of K-25 in progress in April 2012

Centrifuge cascades began operating at Oak Ridge in 1961. A gas centrifuge test facility (K-1210) opened in 1975, followed by a larger centrifuge plant demonstration facility (K-1220) in 1982. In response to an order from President Lyndon B. Johnson to cut production of enriched uranium by 25 percent, K-25 and K-27 ceased production in 1964, but in 1969 K-25 began producing uranium enriched to 3 to 5 percent for use in nuclear reactors. Martin Marietta Energy replaced Union Carbide as the operator in 1984. Gaseous diffusion ceased on 27 August 1985. The Oak Ridge Gaseous Diffusion Plant was renamed the Oak Ridge K-25 Site in 1989, and the East Tennessee Technology Park in 1996.[99] Production of enriched uranium using gaseous diffusion ceased in Portsmouth in 2001, and at Paducah in 2013.[103] Nowadays all commercial uranium enrichment in the United States is carried out using gas centrifuge technology.[104]

The United States Department of Energy (DOE) contracted with British Nuclear Fuels Ltd (BNFL) in 1997 to decontaminate and decommission the facilities. Its subsidiary Reactor Sites Management Company Limited (RSMC) was acquired by EnergySolutions in June 2007. Initially K-29, K-31 and K-33 were to be retained for other uses, but it was subsequently decided to demolish them. Bechtel Jacobs, the environmental management contractor, assumed responsibility for the facility in July 2005. Demolition of K-29 began in January 2006, and was completed in August.[96] Demolition of K-33 began in January 2011, and was completed ahead of schedule in September 2011.[105] It was followed by the demolition of K-31, which began on 8 October 2014,[106] and was completed on 26 June 2015.[107]

Bechtel Jacobs was contracted to dismantle and demolish the K-25 facility in September 2008. The contract, valued at $1.48 billion, was made retrospective to October 2007,[108] and ended in August 2011. Since then demolition work has been carried out by DOE's current environmental management contractor, URS | CH2M Hill Oak Ridge (UCOR).[109] Demolition of the K-25 facility was expected to be completed by July 2014.[110]

By 23 January 2013, demolition of the north and west wings was complete, with only a small portion of the east wing remaining (6 units out of 24 on the east wing).[111] The final section of the east wing was brought down on 19 December 2013. The last debris was removed in 2014.[112] Demolition of K-27, the last of the five gaseous diffusion facilities at Oak Ridge, began in February 2016.[113] US Senator Lamar Alexander and US Congressman Chuck Fleischmann joined 1,500 workers to watch the final wall come down on 30 August 2016. Its demolition was completed on 28 February 2017.[114]

Since 2020, the K-25 site is being redeveloped in part into a general aviation airport to service the city of Oak Ridge. The project is a joint-effort between Oak Ridge city officials, the Tennessee Department of Transportation, the Appalachian Regional Commission, the DOE, and the Federal Aviation Administration.[115] Several small private nuclear facilities are also planned on the site. [116] [117] [118]

Commemoration edit

On 27 February 2020, the K-25 History Center, a 7,500-square foot museum opened at the site. The museum is a branch of the American Museum of Science and Energy (AMSE) and features hundreds of original artifacts and interactive exhibits related to the K-25 site.[119][120][121]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Manhattan District History, Atomic Energy Commission, 1948. Book II - Gaseous Diffusion K-25 Project - Volume 4 [1]
  2. ^ a b c Hewlett & Anderson 1962, pp. 10–14.
  3. ^ Rhodes 1986, pp. 251–254.
  4. ^ Rhodes 1986, pp. 256–263.
  5. ^ Jones 1985, p. 12.
  6. ^ Bohr, Niels; Wheeler, John Archibald (September 1939). "The Mechanism of Nuclear Fission". Phys. Rev. 56 (5). American Physical Society: 426–450. Bibcode:1939PhRv...56..426B. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.56.426.
  7. ^ Wheeler & Ford 1998, pp. 27–28.
  8. ^ Manhattan District 1947a, p. S1.
  9. ^ Manhattan District 1947a, p. 2.1.
  10. ^ a b c Smyth 1945, p. 172.
  11. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, p. 22.
  12. ^ Nier, Alfred O.; Booth, E. T.; Dunning, J. R.; von Grosse, A. (3 March 1940). "Nuclear Fission of Separated Uranium Isotopes". Physical Review. 57 (6): 546. Bibcode:1940PhRv...57..546N. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.57.546. S2CID 4106096.
  13. ^ Nier, Alfred O.; Booth, E. T.; Dunning, J. R.; von Grosse, A. (13 April 1940). "Further Experiments on Fission of Separated Uranium Isotopes". Physical Review. 57 (8): 748. Bibcode:1940PhRv...57..748N. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.57.748.
  14. ^ Rhodes 1986, pp. 322–325.
  15. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, p. 42.
  16. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, pp. 22–23.
  17. ^ a b Hewlett & Anderson 1962, pp. 30–31.
  18. ^ a b c Jones 1985, p. 152.
  19. ^ Manhattan District 1947a, p. S2.
  20. ^ a b Beaton L (1962). "The slow-down in nuclear explosive production". New Scientist. 16 (309): 141–143. Retrieved 20 November 2010.
  21. ^ "Glossary of High Energy Weapons Terms". Nuclear Weapons Archive. Retrieved 8 June 2016.
  22. ^ . Argonne National Laboratory. Archived from the original on 29 March 2016. Retrieved 8 June 2016.
  23. ^ Olah GH, Welch J (1978). "Synthetic methods and reactions. 46. Oxidation of organic compounds with uranium hexafluoride in haloalkane solutions". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 100 (17): 5396–402. doi:10.1021/ja00485a024.
  24. ^ Berry JA, Poole RT, Prescott A, Sharp DW, Winfield JM (1976). "The oxidising and fluoride ion acceptor properties of uranium hexafluoride in acetonitrile". Journal of the Chemical Society, Dalton Transactions (3): 272–274. doi:10.1039/DT9760000272.
  25. ^ a b Manhattan District 1947a, pp. S2–S3.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g Jones 1985, pp. 150–151.
  27. ^ Smyth 1945, p. 175.
  28. ^ a b "Corporate Partners". Atomic Heritage Foundation. Retrieved 1 October 2014.
  29. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, pp. 122–125.
  30. ^ Smyth 1945, p. 173.
  31. ^ a b "Manhattan, NY". Atomic Heritage Foundation. Retrieved 8 June 2016.
  32. ^ Response to letter from Mr. Gus Robinson to General Nichols, providing information relating to Site designations and Site codes for Manhattan District facilities, 10/17/1949. Series: Correspondence Files, 1923–1978. National Archives and Records Administration. 17 October 1949. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
  33. ^ Prince, R.P.; Stanley, A. Milton (2000). "What Does K-25 Stand For? Deciphering the Origins of the Manhattan Project Code Names in Oak Ridge" (PDF). The Journal of East Tennessee History (72): 82–86. ISSN 1058-2126. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
  34. ^ a b "K.T. Keller's Interview – Part 2". Manhattan Project Voices. Retrieved 13 June 2016.
  35. ^ a b "Manhattan Project Spotlight: The Chrysler Corporation". Retrieved 13 June 2016.
  36. ^ Manhattan District 1947b, pp. 5.1–5.3.
  37. ^ a b Hewlett & Anderson 1962, p. 101.
  38. ^ a b c Hewlett & Anderson 1962, p. 125.
  39. ^ "Percival Keith's Interview". Manhattan Project Voices. Retrieved 13 June 2016.
  40. ^ "Edward Norris". Atomic Heritage Foundation. Retrieved 13 June 2016.
  41. ^ a b Hewlett & Anderson 1962, pp. 126–129.
  42. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, pp. 132–134.
  43. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, pp. 136–138.
  44. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, p. 138.
  45. ^ Hewlett & Anderson 1962, pp. 139–140.
  46. ^ Manhattan District 1947c, pp. 6.1–6.2.
  47. ^ a b Groves 1962, pp. 112–113.
  48. ^ "History of J.A. Jones, Inc". FundingUniverse. Retrieved 10 June 2016.
  49. ^ a b c Jones 1985, pp. 160–161.
  50. ^ a b Manhattan District 1947d, p. H1.
  51. ^ a b Manhattan District 1947d, p. S17.
  52. ^ Jones 1985, pp. 383–384.
  53. ^ a b Manhattan District 1947c, pp. 6.3–6.4.
  54. ^ Manhattan District 1947d, p. S4.
  55. ^ a b c d "Powerhouse area / S-50". K-25 Virtual Museum. Retrieved 10 June 2016.
  56. ^ a b Manhattan District 1947d, p. 3.21.
  57. ^ Jones 1985, pp. 384–385.
  58. ^ Manhattan District 1947d, pp. 3.10–3.12.
  59. ^ Jones 1985, pp. 440–442.
  60. ^ a b c Manhattan District 1947d, p. S14.
  61. ^ Manhattan District 1947d, p. 3.15.
  62. ^ Manhattan District 1947d, p. 3.64.
  63. ^ Manhattan District 1947d, pp. 3.8–3.9.
  64. ^ a b c Jones 1985, p. 161.
  65. ^ a b c Manhattan District 1947d, pp. 3.28–3.29.
  66. ^ Jones 1985, p. 158.
  67. ^ Manhattan District 1947e, p. S3.
  68. ^ a b c d e f g "K-25 Virtual Museum – Site Tour". Department of Energy. Retrieved 12 June 2016.
  69. ^ Manhattan District 1947d, pp. 3.67–3.68.
  70. ^ Manhattan District 1947d, pp. 3.72–3.75.
  71. ^ Manhattan District 1947d, p. 5.3.
  72. ^ a b c d Manhattan District 1947d, pp. 3.31–3.41.
  73. ^ a b Manhattan District 1947e, p. S5.
  74. ^ a b Manhattan District 1947e, pp. 2.6–2.7, 12.6.
  75. ^ Manhattan District 1947d, p. 3.40.
  76. ^ Manhattan District 1947f, p. 5.
  77. ^ Johnston, Louis; Williamson, Samuel H. (2023). "What Was the U.S. GDP Then?". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 30 November 2023. United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the MeasuringWorth series.
  78. ^ a b Jones 1985, p. 165.
  79. ^ McKinney, Wayne (3 August 2013). "Water tower at East Tennessee Technology Park demolished" (Press release). UCOR. Retrieved 22 February 2022.
  80. ^ Manhattan District 1947c, p. 7.1.
  81. ^ Jones 1985, p. 157.
  82. ^ Manhattan District 1947d, p. 3.2.
  83. ^ Jones 1985, p. 162.
  84. ^ a b Manhattan District 1947e, pp. S1–S3.
  85. ^ Manhattan District 1947e, pp. 2.4–2.6, 12.5.
  86. ^ a b Jones 1985, pp. 166–168.
  87. ^ Jones 1985, p. 148.
  88. ^ a b Jones 1985, p. 169.
  89. ^ Manhattan District 1947g, pp. 1–2.
  90. ^ Jones 1985, p. 183.
  91. ^ Jones 1985, pp. 522, 535–538.
  92. ^ Manhattan District 1947f, pp. 1–7.
  93. ^ Manhattan District 1947f, pp. 16–20.
  94. ^ Manhattan District 1947f, pp. 8–10.
  95. ^ Bischak, Greg (1989). "Facing the Second Generation of the Nuclear Weapons Complex: Renewal of the Nuclear Production Base or Economic Conversion?". In Dumas, Lloyd J.; Thee, Marek (eds.). Making Peace Possible: The Promise of Economic Conversion. Peace Research Monograph. Vol. 19. Pergamon Press. p. 115. ISBN 0-08-037252X. Retrieved 20 March 2022.
  96. ^ a b "East Tennessee Technology Park". Global Security. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
  97. ^ "Paducah Site". Department of Energy. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
  98. ^ "Portsmouth". Centrus Energy Corp. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
  99. ^ a b "K-25 Virtual Museum – K-25 Story Timeline". Department of Energy. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
  100. ^ "Isotope Separation Methods". Atomic Heritage Foundation. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
  101. ^ Kemp 2012, pp. 281–287
  102. ^ Kemp 2012, pp. 291–297
  103. ^ "Gaseous Diffusion Plants". Centrus Energy Corp. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
  104. ^ "Uranium Enrichment". United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Retrieved 17 July 2020.
  105. ^ . Department of Energy. 20 September 2011. Archived from the original on 23 June 2016. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
  106. ^ "Demolition of K-31 gaseous diffusion building begins". Department of Energy. 8 October 2014. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
  107. ^ "DOE completes demolition of K-31 gaseous diffusion building". Department of Energy. 26 June 2015. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
  108. ^ Munger, Frank (24 September 2008). . Knoxville News Sentinel. Archived from the original on 1 March 2014. Retrieved 14 February 2009.
  109. ^ (PDF). DOE Oak Ridge Environmental Management Program. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 August 2016. Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  110. ^ . Department of Energy. 1 February 2012. Archived from the original on 2 February 2014. Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  111. ^ . Department of Energy. 23 January 2013. Archived from the original on 17 June 2013. Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  112. ^ "DOE, UCOR demolish last piece of K-25, once the world's largest building". Oak Ridge Today. 19 December 2013. Retrieved 19 January 2014.
  113. ^ "K-27 Demolition Will Fulfill DOE's Vision 2016". Department of Energy. 8 February 2016. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
  114. ^ "EM Marks Another Building Demolition at Oak Ridge". Department of Energy. 28 February 2017. Retrieved 27 May 2017.
  115. ^ Pounds, Benjamin (10 March 2021). "More steps taken toward creation of new airport". The Tennessean. Retrieved 5 April 2021.
  116. ^ Silas, Sloan. "US nuclear fuel manufacturer will open $13 million production facility in Oak Ridge". knoxnews.com. Knoxville News Sentinel. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
  117. ^ Benjamin, Pounds. "Making plans, hiring people for the Hermes reactor". oakridger.com. The Oak Ridger. Retrieved 3 March 2022.
  118. ^ Crocker, Brittany. "Oak Ridge: Medical isotope producer to be built on decontaminated land near old uranium production plant". knoxnews.com. Knoxville News Sentinel. Retrieved 3 March 2022.
  119. ^ "Oak Ridge Opens K-25 History Center to Preserve Site's Rich History". Department of Energy. Retrieved 10 December 2022.
  120. ^ "K-25 History Center - American Museum of Science and Energy". American Museum of Science and Energy. Retrieved 10 December 2022.
  121. ^ "K-25 History Museum - Stay on the Job. Finish the Job". K-25 History Center. Retrieved 10 December 2022.

References edit

  • Groves, Leslie (1962). Now It Can Be Told: The Story of the Manhattan Project. New York: Harper. ISBN 0-306-70738-1. OCLC 537684.
  • Hewlett, Richard G.; Anderson, Oscar E. (1962). The New World, 1939–1946 (PDF). University Park, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press. ISBN 0-520-07186-7. OCLC 637004643. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
  • Jones, Vincent (1985). (PDF). Washington, D.C.: United States Army Center of Military History. OCLC 10913875. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 October 2014. Retrieved 25 August 2013.
  • Kemp, R. Scott (April 2012). "The End of Manhattan: How the Gas Centrifuge Changed the Quest for Nuclear Weapons". Technology and Culture. 53 (2): 272–305. doi:10.1353/tech.2012.0046. ISSN 0040-165X. S2CID 109799217.
  • Manhattan District (1947a). Manhattan District History, Book II – Gaseous Diffusion (K-25) Project, Volume 1 – General Features (PDF). Washington, D.C.: Manhattan District.
  • Manhattan District (1947b). Manhattan District History, Book II – Gaseous Diffusion (K-25) Project, Volume 2 – Research (PDF). Washington, D.C.: Manhattan District.
  • Manhattan District (1947c). Manhattan District History, Book II – Gaseous Diffusion (K-25) Project, Volume 3 – Design (PDF). Washington, D.C.: Manhattan District.
  • Manhattan District (1947d). Manhattan District History, Book II – Gaseous Diffusion (K-25) Project, Volume 4 – Construction (PDF). Washington, D.C.: Manhattan District.
  • Manhattan District (1947e). Manhattan District History, Book II – Gaseous Diffusion (K-25) Project, Volume 5 – Operation (PDF). Washington, D.C.: Manhattan District.
  • Manhattan District (1947f). Manhattan District History, Book II – Gaseous Diffusion (K-25) Project, Volume 5 – Operation – Supplement No. 1 (PDF). Washington, D.C.: Manhattan District.
  • Manhattan District (1947g). Manhattan District History, Book II – Gaseous Diffusion (K-25) Project, Volume 5 – Operation – Appendix (PDF). Washington, D.C.: Manhattan District.
  • Rhodes, Richard (1986). The Making of the Atomic Bomb. London: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-671-44133-7.
  • Smyth, Henry DeWolf (1945). Atomic Energy for Military Purposes: The Official Report on the Development of the Atomic Bomb under the Auspices of the United States Government, 1940–1945. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. OCLC 770285.
  • Wheeler, John Archibald; Ford, Kenneth (1998). Geons, Black Holes, and Quantum Foam: A Life in Physics. New York: W.W. Norton & Co. ISBN 0-393-04642-7.

External links edit

  • K-25 History Center on-site museum
  • K-25 Virtual Museum
  • Historic photos of K25 by Ed Westcott
  • Demolition of the north end of the K-25 building (Video)
  • Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) documentation, filed under State Highway 58, Oak Ridge, Anderson County, TN:
    • HAER No. TN-49, "K-25 Plant, Portal 4", 20 photos, 42 data pages, 2 photo caption pages
    • HAER No. TN-51, "K-25 Plant, Building K-1037", 6 photos, 96 data pages, 1 photo caption page

other, uses, disambiguation, 93222, 39500, 93222, 39500, building, ridge, gaseous, diffusion, plant, aerial, view, looking, southeast, mile, long, building, shape, completely, demolished, 2013, codename, given, manhattan, project, program, produce, enriched, u. For other uses see K25 disambiguation 35 55 56 N 84 23 42 W 35 93222 N 84 39500 W 35 93222 84 39500 The K 25 building of the Oak Ridge Gaseous Diffusion Plant aerial view looking southeast The mile long building in the shape of a U was completely demolished in 2013 K 25 was the codename given by the Manhattan Project to the program to produce enriched uranium for atomic bombs using the gaseous diffusion method Originally the codename for the product over time it came to refer to the project the production facility located at the Clinton Engineer Works in Oak Ridge Tennessee the main gaseous diffusion building and ultimately the site When it was built in 1944 the four story K 25 gaseous diffusion plant was the world s largest building comprising over 5 264 000 square feet 489 000 m2 1 of floor space and a volume of 97 500 000 cubic feet 2 760 000 m3 Construction of the K 25 facility was undertaken by J A Jones Construction At the height of construction over 25 000 workers were employed on the site Gaseous diffusion was but one of three enrichment technologies used by the Manhattan Project Slightly enriched product from the S 50 thermal diffusion plant was fed into the K 25 gaseous diffusion plant Its product in turn was fed into the Y 12 electromagnetic plant The enriched uranium was used in the Little Boy atomic bomb used in the atomic bombing of Hiroshima In 1946 the K 25 gaseous diffusion plant became capable of producing highly enriched product After the war four more gaseous diffusion plants named K 27 K 29 K 31 and K 33 were added to the site The K 25 site was renamed the Oak Ridge Gaseous Diffusion Plant in 1955 Production of enriched uranium ended in 1964 and gaseous diffusion finally ceased on the site on 27 August 1985 The Oak Ridge Gaseous Diffusion Plant was renamed the Oak Ridge K 25 Site in 1989 and the East Tennessee Technology Park in 1996 Demolition of all five gaseous diffusion plants was completed in February 2017 Contents 1 Background 2 Gaseous diffusion 3 Organization 4 Codename 5 Research and development 5 1 Diffusers 5 2 Pumps 5 3 Barriers 6 Construction 6 1 Power plant 6 2 Gaseous diffusion plant 6 3 Other buildings 7 Operations 8 Closure and demolition 9 Commemoration 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksBackground editThe discovery of the neutron by James Chadwick in 1932 2 followed by that of nuclear fission in uranium by the German chemists Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann in 1938 3 and its theoretical explanation and naming by Lise Meitner and Otto Frisch soon after 4 opened up the possibility of a controlled nuclear chain reaction with uranium At the Pupin Laboratories at Columbia University Enrico Fermi and Leo Szilard began exploring how this might be achieved 2 Fears that a German atomic bomb project would develop atomic weapons first especially among scientists who were refugees from Nazi Germany and other fascist countries were expressed in the Einstein Szilard letter to the President of the United States Franklin D Roosevelt This prompted Roosevelt to initiate preliminary research in late 1939 5 Niels Bohr and John Archibald Wheeler applied the liquid drop model of the atomic nucleus to explain the mechanism of nuclear fission 6 As the experimental physicists studied fission they uncovered puzzling results George Placzek asked Bohr why uranium seemed to fission with both fast and slow neutrons Walking to a meeting with Wheeler Bohr had an insight that the fission at low energies was due to the uranium 235 isotope while at high energies it was mainly due to the far more abundant uranium 238 isotope 7 The former makes up just 0 714 percent of the uranium atoms in natural uranium about one in every 140 8 natural uranium is 99 28 percent uranium 238 There is also a tiny amount of uranium 234 which accounts for just 0 006 percent 9 At Columbia John R Dunning believed this was the case but Fermi was not so sure The only way to settle this was to obtain a sample of uranium 235 and test it 2 He got Alfred O C Nier from the University of Minnesota to prepare samples of uranium enriched in uranium 234 235 and 238 using a mass spectrometer These were ready in February 1940 and Dunning Eugene T Booth and Aristid von Grosse then carried out a series of experiments They demonstrated that uranium 235 was indeed primarily responsible for fission with slow neutrons 10 but were unable to determine precise neutron capture cross sections because their samples were not sufficiently enriched 11 12 13 At the University of Birmingham in Britain the Australian physicist Mark Oliphant assigned two refugee physicists Otto Frisch and Rudolf Peierls the task of investigating the feasibility of an atomic bomb ironically because their status as enemy aliens precluded their working on secret projects like radar 14 Their March 1940 Frisch Peierls memorandum indicated that the critical mass of uranium 235 was within an order of magnitude of 10 kilograms 22 lb which was small enough to be carried by a bomber aircraft of the day 15 Gaseous diffusion editMain article Gaseous diffusion nbsp Gaseous diffusion uses semi permeable membranes to separate enriched uranium nbsp Stages are connected together to form a cascade A B and C are pumps In April 1940 Jesse Beams Ross Gunn Fermi Nier Merle Tuve and Harold Urey had a meeting at the American Physical Society in Washington D C At the time the prospect of building an atomic bomb seemed dim and even creating a chain reaction would likely require enriched uranium They therefore recommended that research be conducted with the aim of developing the means to separate kilogram amounts of uranium 235 16 At a lunch on 21 May 1940 George B Kistiakowsky suggested the possibility of using gaseous diffusion 17 Gaseous diffusion is based on Graham s law which states that the rate of effusion of a gas through a porous barrier is inversely proportional to the square root of the gas s molecular mass In a container with a porous barrier containing a mixture of two gases the lighter molecules will pass out of the container more rapidly than the heavier molecules The gas leaving the container is slightly enriched in the lighter molecules while the residual gas is slightly depleted 18 A container wherein the enrichment process takes place through gaseous diffusion is called a diffuser 19 Gaseous diffusion had been used to separate isotopes before Francis William Aston had used it to partially separate isotopes of neon in 1931 and Gustav Ludwig Hertz had improved on the method to almost completely separate neon by running it through a series of stages In the United States William D Harkins had used it to separate chlorine Kistiakowsky was familiar with the work of Charles G Maier at the Bureau of Mines who had also used the process to separate gases 17 Uranium hexafluoride UF6 was the only known compound of uranium sufficiently volatile to be used in the gaseous diffusion process 18 Before this could be done the Special Alloyed Materials SAM Laboratories at Columbia University and the Kellex Corporation had to overcome formidable difficulties to develop a suitable barrier Fortunately fluorine consists of only a single natural isotope 19 F so that the 1 percent difference in molecular weights between 235 UF6 and 238 UF6 is due solely to the difference in weights of the uranium isotopes For these reasons UF6 was the only choice as a feedstock for the gaseous diffusion process 20 Uranium hexafluoride a solid at room temperature sublimes at 56 5 C 133 7 F at 1 standard atmosphere 100 kPa 21 22 Applying Graham s law to uranium hexafluoride Rate 1 Rate 2 M 2 M 1 352 349 1 0043 displaystyle mbox Rate 1 over mbox Rate 2 sqrt M 2 over M 1 sqrt 352 over 349 approx 1 0043 nbsp where Rate1 is the rate of effusion of 235UF6 Rate2 is the rate of effusion of 238UF6 M1 is the molar mass of 235UF6 235 6 19 349 g mol 1 M2 is the molar mass of 238UF6 238 6 19 352 g mol 1 Uranium hexafluoride is a highly corrosive substance It is an oxidant 23 and a Lewis acid which is able to bind to fluoride 24 It reacts with water to form a solid compound and is very difficult to handle on an industrial scale 20 Organization editBooth Dunning and von Grosse investigated the gaseous diffusion process In 1941 they were joined by Francis G Slack from Vanderbilt University and Willard F Libby from the University of California In July 1941 an Office of Scientific Research and Development OSRD contract was awarded to Columbia University to study gaseous diffusion 10 25 With the help of the mathematician Karl P Cohen they built a twelve stage pilot gaseous diffusion plant at the Pupin Laboratories 26 Initial tests showed that the stages were not as efficient as the theory would suggest 27 they would need about 4 600 stages to enrich to 90 percent uranium 235 18 nbsp The Woolworth Building in Manhattan housed the offices of the Kellex Corporation and the Manhattan District s New York Area A secret contract was awarded to M W Kellogg for engineering studies in July 1941 10 25 This included the design and construction of a ten stage pilot gaseous diffusion plant On 14 December 1942 the Manhattan District the US Army component of the Manhattan Project as the effort to develop an atomic bomb became known contracted Kellogg to design build and operate a full scale production plant Unusually the contract did not require any guarantees from Kellogg that it could actually accomplish this task Because the scope of the project was not well defined Kellogg and the Manhattan District agreed to defer any financial details to a later cost plus contract which was executed in April 1944 Kellogg was then paid 2 5 million 26 For security reasons the Army had Kellogg establish a wholly owned subsidiary the Kellex Corporation so the gaseous diffusion project could be kept separate from other company work 26 Kell stood for Kellogg and X for secret 28 Kellex operated as a self contained and autonomous entity Percival C Keith Kellogg s vice president of engineering 28 was placed in charge of Kellex He drew extensively on Kellogg to staff the new company but also had to recruit staff from outside as well Eventually Kellex would have over 3 700 employees 26 Dunning remained in charge at Columbia until 1 May 1943 when the Manhattan District took over the contract from OSRD By this time Slack s group had nearly 50 members His was the largest group and it was working on the most challenging problem the design of a suitable barrier through which the gas could diffuse Another 30 scientists and technicians were working in five other groups Henry A Boorse was responsible for the pumps Booth for the cascade test units Libby handled chemistry Nier analytical work and Hugh C Paxton engineering support 29 The Army reorganized the research effort at Columbia which became the Special Alloyed Materials SAM Laboratories Urey was put in charge Dunning becoming head of one of its divisions 26 It would remain this way until 1 March 1945 when the SAM Laboratories were taken over by Union Carbide 30 The expansion of the SAM Laboratories led to a search for more space The Nash Garage Building at 3280 Broadway was purchased by Columbia University Originally an automobile dealership it was just a few blocks from the campus Major Benjamin K Hough Jr was the Manhattan District s Columbia Area engineer and he moved his offices here too 26 31 Kellex was in the Woolworth Building at 233 Broadway in Lower Manhattan In January 1943 Lieutenant Colonel James C Stowers was appointed New York Area Engineer with responsibility for the entire K 25 Project His small staff initially of 20 military and civilian personnel but which gradually grew to over 70 was co located in the Woolworth Building The Manhattan District had its offices nearby at 270 Broadway until it moved to Oak Ridge Tennessee in August 1943 26 31 Codename editThe codename K 25 was a combination of the K from Kellex and 25 a World War II era code designation for uranium 235 an isotope of element 92 mass number 235 The term was first used in Kellex internal reports for the end product enriched uranium in March 1943 By April 1943 the term K 25 plant was being used for the plant that created it That month the term K 25 Project was applied to the entire project to develop uranium enrichment using the gaseous diffusion process When other K buildings were added after the war K 25 became the name of the original larger complex 32 33 Research and development editDiffusers edit nbsp A gaseous diffusion cell showing the diffuser The highly corrosive nature of uranium hexafluoride presented several technological challenges Pipes and fittings that it came into contact with had to be made of or clad with nickel This was fine for small objects but impractical for the large diffusers the tank like containers that had to hold the gas under pressure Nickel was a vital war material and although the Manhattan Project could use its overriding priority to acquire it making the diffusers out of solid nickel would deplete the national supply The director of the Manhattan Project Brigadier General Leslie R Groves Jr gave the contract to build the diffusers to Chrysler In turn its president K T Keller assigned Carl Heussner an expert in electroplating the task of developing a process for electroplating such a large object Senior Chrysler executives called this Project X 100 34 35 Electroplating used one thousandth of the nickel of a solid nickel diffuser The SAM Laboratories had already attempted this and failed Heussner experimented with a prototype in a building built within a building and found that it could be done so long as the series of pickling and scaling steps required were done without anything coming in contact with oxygen Chrysler s entire factory at Lynch Road in Detroit was turned over to the manufacture of diffusers The electroplating process required over 50 000 square feet 4 600 m2 of floor space several thousand workers and a complicated air filtration system to ensure the nickel was not contaminated By the war s end Chrysler had built and shipped more than 3 500 diffusers 34 35 Pumps edit The gaseous diffusion process required suitable pumps that had to meet stringent requirements Like the diffusers they had to resist corrosion from the uranium hexafluoride feed Corrosion would not only damage the pumps it would contaminate the feed They could not afford any leakage of uranium hexafluoride especially if it was already enriched or of oil which would react with the uranium hexafluoride They had to pump at high rates and handle a gas twelve times as dense as air To meet these requirements the SAM Laboratories chose to use centrifugal pumps They were aware that the desired compression ratio of 2 3 1 to 3 2 1 was unusually high for this type of pump For some purposes a reciprocating pump would suffice 36 and these were designed by Boorse at the SAM Laboratories while Ingersoll Rand tackled the centrifugal pumps 37 In early 1943 Ingersoll Rand pulled out 38 Keith approached the Clark Compressor Company and Worthington Pump and Machinery but they turned it down saying it could not be done 39 So Keith and Groves saw executives at Allis Chalmers who agreed to build a new factory to produce the pumps even though the pump design was still uncertain The SAM Laboratories came up with a design and Westinghouse built some prototypes that were successfully tested Then Judson Swearingen at the Elliott Company came up with a revolutionary and promising design that was mechanically stable with seals that would contain the gas This design was manufactured by Allis Chalmers 38 Barriers edit Difficulties with the diffusers and pumps paled in significance beside those with the porous barrier To work the gaseous diffusion process required a barrier with microscopic holes but not subject to plugging It had to be extremely porous but strong enough to handle the high pressures And like everything else it had to resist corrosion from uranium hexafluoride The latter criterion suggested a nickel barrier 38 Foster C Nix at the Bell Telephone Laboratories experimented with nickel powder while Edward O Norris at the C O Jelliff Manufacturing Corporation and Edward Adler at the City College of New York worked on a design with electroplated metallic nickel 37 Norris was an English interior decorator who had developed a very fine metal mesh for use with a spray gun 40 Their design appeared too brittle and fragile for the proposed use particularly on the higher stages of enrichment but there was hope that this could be overcome 41 nbsp Setting up a process pump In 1943 Urey brought in Hugh S Taylor from Princeton University to look at the problem of a usable barrier Libby made progress on understanding the chemistry of uranium hexafluoride leading to ideas on how to prevent corrosion and plugging Chemical researchers at the SAM Laboratories studied fluorocarbons which resisted corrosion and could be used as lubricants and coolants in the gaseous diffusion plant Despite this progress the K 25 Project was in serious trouble without a suitable barrier and by August 1943 it was facing cancellation On 13 August Groves informed the Military Policy Committee the senior committee that steered the Manhattan Project that gaseous diffusion enrichment in excess of fifty percent was probably infeasible and the gaseous diffusion plant would be limited to producing product with a lower enrichment which could be fed into the calutrons of the Y 12 electromagnetic plant Urey therefore began preparations to mass produce the Norris Adler barrier despite its problems 41 Meanwhile Union Carbide and Kellex had made researchers at the Bakelite Corporation a subsidiary of Union Carbide aware of Nix s unsuccessful efforts with powdered nickel barriers To Frazier Groff and other researchers at Bakelite s laboratories in Bound Brook New Jersey it seemed that Nix was not taking advantage of the latest techniques and they began their own development efforts Both Bell and Bound Brook sent samples of their powdered nickel barriers to Taylor for evaluation but he was unimpressed neither had come up with a practical barrier At Kellogg s laboratory in Jersey City New Jersey Clarence A Johnson who was aware of the steps taken by the SAM Laboratories to improve the Norris Adler barrier realized that they could also be taken with the Bakelite barrier The result was a barrier better than either although still short of what was required At a meeting at Columbia with the Army in attendance on 20 October 1943 Keith proposed switching the development effort to the Johnson barrier Urey balked at this fearing this would destroy morale at the SAM Laboratories The issue was put to Groves at a meeting on 3 November 1943 and he decided to pursue development of both the Johnson and the Norris Adler barriers 42 Groves summoned British help in the form of Wallace Akers and fifteen members of the British gaseous diffusion project who would review the progress made thus far 43 Their verdict was that while the new barrier was potentially superior Keith s undertaking to build a new facility to produce the new barrier in just four months produce all the barriers required in another four and have the production facility up and running in just twelve would be something of a miraculous achievement 44 On 16 January 1944 Groves ruled in favor of the Johnson barrier Johnson built a pilot plant for the new process at the Nash Building Taylor analyzed the sample barriers produced and pronounced only 5 percent of them to be of acceptable quality Edward Mack Jr created his own pilot plant at Schermerhorn Hall at Columbia and Groves obtained 80 short tons 73 t of nickel from the International Nickel Company With plenty of nickel to work with by April 1944 both pilot plants were producing barriers of acceptable quality 45 percent of the time 45 Construction editThe site chosen was at the Clinton Engineer Works in Tennessee The area was inspected by representatives of the Manhattan District Kellex and Union Carbide on 18 January 1943 Consideration was also given to sites near the Shasta Dam in California and the Big Bend of the Columbia River in Washington state The lower humidity of these areas made them more suitable for a gaseous diffusion plant but the Clinton Engineer Works site was immediately available and otherwise suitable Groves decided on the site in April 1943 46 Under the contract Kellex had responsibility not just for the design and engineering of the K 25 plant but for its construction as well The prime construction contractor was J A Jones Construction from Charlotte North Carolina It had impressed Groves with its work on several major Army construction projects 47 such as Camp Shelby Mississippi 48 There were more than sixty subcontractors 49 Kellex engaged another construction company Ford Bacon amp Davis to build the fluorine and nitrogen facilities and the conditioning plant 49 Construction work was initially the responsibility of Lieutenant Colonel Warren George the Chief of the Construction Division of the Clinton Engineer Works Major W P Cornelius became the construction officer responsible for K 25 works on 31 July 1943 50 He was answerable to Stowers back in Manhattan 49 He became Chief of the Construction Division on 1 March 1946 50 J J Allison was the resident engineer from Kellex and Edwin L Jones the General Manager of J A Jones 51 Power plant edit nbsp K 25 power plant the building with three smoke stacks in 1945 The dark building behind it is the S 50 thermal diffusion plant Construction began before completion of the design for the gaseous diffusion process Because of the large amount of electric power the K 25 plant was expected to consume it was decided to provide it with its own electric power plant While the Tennessee Valley Authority TVA believed it could supply the Clinton Engineer Works needs there was unease about relying on a single supplier when a power failure could cost the gaseous diffusion plant weeks of work and the lines to TVA could be sabotaged A local plant was more secure The Kellex engineers were also attracted to the idea of being able to generate the variable frequency current required by the gaseous diffusion process without complicated transformers 52 A site was chosen for this on the western edge of the Clinton Engineer Works site where it could draw cold water from the Clinch River and discharge warm water into Poplar Creek without affecting the inflow Groves approved this location on 3 May 1943 53 Surveying began on the power plant site on 31 May 1943 and J A Jones started construction work the following day Because the bedrock was 35 to 40 feet 11 to 12 m below the surface the power plant was supported on 40 concrete filled caissons 54 Installation of the first boiler commenced in October 1943 55 Construction work was complete by late September 56 To prevent sabotage the power plant was connected to the gaseous diffusion plant by an underground conduit Despite this there was one act of sabotage in which a nail was driven through the electric cable The culprit was never found but was considered more likely to be a disgruntled employee than an Axis spy 47 Electric power in the United States was generated at 60 hertz the power house was able to generate variable frequencies between 45 and 60 hertz and constant frequencies of 60 and 120 hertz This capability was not ultimately required and all but one of the K 25 systems ran on a constant 60 hertz the exception using a constant 120 hertz 55 The first coal fired boiler was started on 7 April 1944 followed by the second on 14 July 1944 and the third on 2 November 1944 56 Each produced 750 000 pounds 340 000 kg of steam an hour at a pressure of 1 325 pounds per square inch 9 140 kPa and a temperature of 935 F 502 C 55 To obtain the fourteen turbine generators needed Groves had to use the Manhattan Project s priority to overrule Julius Albert Krug the director of the Office of War Utilities 57 The turbine generators had a combined output of 238 000 kilowatts The power plant could also receive power from TVA It was decommissioned in the 1960s and demolished in 1995 55 Gaseous diffusion plant edit A site for the K 25 facility was chosen near the high school of the now abandoned town of Wheat As the dimensions of the K 25 facility became more apparent it was decided to move it to a larger site near Poplar Creek closer to the power plant This site was approved on 24 June 1943 53 Considerable work was required to prepare the site Existing roads in the area were improved to take heavy traffic A new 5 1 mile 8 2 km road was built to connect the site to US Route 70 and another 5 miles 8 0 km long to connect with Tennessee State Route 61 An old ferry over the Clinch River was upgraded and then replaced with a 360 foot 110 m bridge in December 1943 A 10 7 mile 17 2 km railroad spur was run from Blair Tennessee to the K 25 site Some 12 9 miles 20 8 km of sidings were also provided The first carload of freight traversed the line on 18 September 1943 58 nbsp K 25 under construction It was initially intended that the construction workers should live off site but the poor condition of the roads and a shortage of accommodations in the area made commuting long and difficult and in turn made it difficult to find and retain workers Construction workers therefore came to be housed in large hutment and trailer camps The J A Jones camp for K 25 workers known as Happy Valley 59 held 15 000 people This required 8 dormitories 17 barracks 1 590 hutments 1 153 trailers and 100 Victory Houses 60 A pumping station was built to supply drinking water from the Clinch River along with a water treatment plant 61 Amenities included a school eight cafeterias a bakery theater three recreation halls a warehouse and a cold storage plant 60 Ford Bacon amp Davis established a smaller camp for 2 100 people 60 Responsibility for the camps was transferred to the Roane Anderson Company on 25 January 1946 and the school was transferred to district control in March 1946 62 Work began on the 130 acre 53 ha main facility area on 20 October 1943 Although generally flat some 3 500 000 cubic yards 2 700 000 m3 of soil and rock had to be excavated from areas up to 46 feet 14 m high and six major areas had to be filled in to a maximum depth of 23 5 feet 7 2 m Normally buildings containing complicated heavy machinery would rest on concrete columns down to the bedrock but this would have required thousands of columns of different length To save time soil compaction was used instead Layers were laid down and compacted with sheepsfoot rollers in the areas that had to be filled in and the footings were laid over compacted soil in the low lying areas and the undisturbed soil in the areas that had been excavated Activities overlapped so concrete pouring began while grading was still going on 63 64 Cranes started lifting the steel frames into place on 19 January 1944 65 nbsp K 25 under construction Kellex s design for the main process building of K 25 called for a four story U shaped structure 0 5 miles 0 80 km long containing 51 main process buildings and 3 purge cascade buildings 65 These were divided into nine sections Within these were cells of six stages The cells could be operated independently or consecutively within a section Similarly the sections could be operated separately or as part of a single cascade 66 When completed there were 2 892 stages 67 The basement housed the auxiliary equipment such as the transformers switch gears and air conditioning systems The ground floor contained the cells The third level contained the piping The fourth floor was the operating floor which contained the control room and the hundreds of instrument panels From here the operators monitored the process 68 The first section was ready for test runs on 17 April 1944 although the barriers were not yet ready to be installed 64 The main process building surpassed The Pentagon as the largest building in the world 68 with a floor area of 5 264 000 square feet 489 000 m2 and an enclosed volume of 97 500 000 cubic feet 2 760 000 m3 65 Construction required 200 000 cubic yards 150 000 m3 of concrete and 100 miles 160 km of gas pipes 69 Because uranium hexafluoride corrodes steel and steel piping had to be coated in nickel smaller pipes were made of copper or monel 68 The equipment operated under vacuum pressures so plumbing had to be air tight Special efforts were made to create as clean an environment as possible to areas where piping or fixtures were being installed J A Jones established a special cleanliness unit on 18 April 1944 Buildings were completely sealed off air was filtered and all cleaning was with vacuum cleaners and mopping Workers wore white lintless gloves 70 At the peak of construction activity in May 1945 25 266 people were employed on the site 71 Other buildings edit Although by far the largest the main process building K 300 was but one of many that made up the facility There was a conditioning building K 1401 where piping and equipment were cleaned prior to installation A feed purification building K 101 was built to remove impurities from the uranium hexafluoride but never operated as such because the suppliers provided feed good enough to be fed into the gaseous diffusion process The three story surge and waste removal building K 601 processed the tail stream of depleted uranium hexafluoride The air conditioning building K 1401 provided 76 500 cubic feet 2 170 m3 per minute of clean dry air K 1201 compressed the air The nitrogen plant K 1408 provided gas for use as a pump sealant and to protect equipment from moist air 68 72 73 nbsp The K 1001 administration building provided 2 acres 0 81 ha of office space The fluorine generating plant K 1300 generated bottled and stored fluorine 72 It had not been in great demand before the war and Kellex and the Manhattan District considered four different processes for large scale production A process developed by the Hooker Chemical Company was chosen Owing to the hazardous nature of fluorine it was decided that shipping it across the United States was inadvisable and it should be manufactured on site at the Clinton Engineer Works 74 Two pump houses K 801 and K 802 and two cooling towers H 801 and H 802 provided 135 000 000 US gallons 510 Ml of cooling water per day for the motors and compressors 68 72 73 The administration building K 1001 provided 2 acres 0 81 ha of office space A laboratory building K 1401 contained facilities for testing and analyzing feed and product Five drum warehouses K 1025 A to E had 4 300 square feet 400 m2 of floor space to store drums of uranium hexafluoride Originally this was on the K 27 site The buildings were moved on a truck to make way for K 27 There were also warehouses for general stores K 1035 spare parts K 1036 and equipment K 1037 A cafeteria K 1002 provided meal facilities including a segregated lunch room for African Americans There were three changing houses K 1008 A B and C a dispensary K 1003 an instrument repair building K 1024 and a fire station K 1021 68 72 In mid January 1945 Kellex proposed an extension to K 25 to allow product enrichment of up to 85 percent Groves initially approved this but later canceled it in favor of a 540 stage side feed unit which became known as K 27 which could process a slightly enriched product This could then be fed into K 25 or the calutrons at the Y 12 Kellex estimated that using the enriched feed from K 27 could lift the output from K 25 from 35 to 60 percent uranium 235 64 Construction started at K 27 on 3 April 1945 75 and was completed in December 1945 68 The construction work was expedited by making it virtually a Chinese copy of a section of K 25 76 By 31 December 1946 when the Manhattan Project ended 110 048 961 man hours of construction work had been performed at the K 25 site 51 The total cost including that of K 27 was 479 589 999 equivalent to 6 44 billion in 2023 77 78 The water tower K 1206 F was a 382 foot 116 m structure that held 400 000 US gallons 1 500 000 L of water It was built in 1958 by the Chicago Bridge and Iron Company and served as reservoir for the fire suppression system Over 1 5 million pounds 680 tonnes of steel was used in its construction It operated until 3 June 2013 when the valves were turned off It was then drained and disconnected and was taken out of service on 15 July On 3 August 2013 it was demolished with explosives 79 Operations edit nbsp The K 25 control room The preliminary specification for the K 25 plant in March 1943 called for it to produce 1 kilogram 2 2 lb a day of product that was 90 percent uranium 235 80 As the practical difficulties were realized this target was reduced to 36 percent On the other hand the cascade design meant construction did not need to be complete before the plant started operating 81 In August 1943 Kellex submitted a schedule that called for a capability to produce material enriched to 5 percent uranium 235 by 1 June 1945 15 percent by 1 July 1945 and 36 percent by 23 August 1945 82 This schedule was revised in August 1944 to 0 9 percent by 1 January 1945 5 percent by 10 June 1945 15 percent by 1 August 1945 23 percent by 13 September 1945 and 36 percent as soon as possible after that 83 A meeting between the Manhattan District and Kellogg on 12 December 1942 recommended the K 25 plant be operated by Union Carbide This would be through a wholly owned subsidiary Carbon and Carbide Chemicals A cost plus fixed fee contract was signed on 18 January 1943 setting the fee at 75 000 per month This was later increased to 96 000 a month to operate both K 25 and K 27 84 Union Carbide did not wish to be the sole operator of the facility Union Carbide suggested the conditioning plant be built and operated by Ford Bacon amp Davis The Manhattan District found this acceptable and a cost plus fixed fee contract was negotiated with a fee of 216 000 for services up to the end of June 1945 The contract was terminated early on 1 May 1945 when Union Carbide took over the plant Ford Bacon amp Davis was therefore paid 202 000 85 The other exception was the fluorine plant Hooker Chemical was asked to supervise its construction of the fluorine plant and initially to operate it for a fixed fee of 24 500 The plant was turned over to Union Carbide on 1 February 1945 74 nbsp A worker on a bicycle in the K 25 operating level Part of the K 300 complex was taken over by Union Carbide in August 1944 and was run as a pilot plant training operators and developing procedures using nitrogen instead of uranium hexafluoride until October 1944 and then perfluoroheptane until April 1945 84 The design of the gaseous diffusion plant allowed for it to be completed in sections and for these to be put into operation while work continued on the others J A Jones completed the first 60 stages by the end of 1944 Before each stage was accepted it underwent tests by J A Jones Carbide and Carbon and SAM Laboratories technicians to verify that the equipment was working and there were no leaks Between four and six hundred people devoted eight months to this testing Perfluoroheptane was used as a test fluid until February 1945 when it was decided to use uranium hexafluoride despite its corrosive nature 86 The Manhattan District engineer Colonel Kenneth Nichols placed Major John J Moran in charge of production at K 25 Production commenced in February 1945 86 and the first product was shipped to the calutrons in March 87 By April the gaseous diffusion plant was producing 1 1 percent product 88 It was then decided that instead of processing uranium hexafluoride feed from the Harshaw Chemical Company the gaseous diffusion plant would take the product of the S 50 thermal diffusion plant with an average enrichment of about 0 85 percent 89 Product enrichment continued to improve as more stages came online and performed better than anticipated In June product was being enriched to 7 percent by September it was 23 percent 88 The S 50 plant ceased operation on 9 September 90 and Kellex transferred the last unit to Union Carbide on 11 September 1945 78 Highly enriched uranium was used in the Little Boy atomic bomb used in the bombing of Hiroshima on 6 August 1945 91 nbsp Air compressors and water pumps in the K 1101 air conditioning building With the end of the war in August 1945 the Manhattan Project s priority shifted from speed to economy and efficiency The cascades were configurable so they could produce a large amount of slightly enriched product by running them in parallel or a small amount of highly enriched product through running them in series By early 1946 with K 27 in operation the facility was producing 3 6 kilograms 7 9 lb per day enriched to 30 percent The next step was to increase the enrichment further to 60 percent This was achieved on 20 July 1946 This presented a problem because Y 12 was not equipped to handle feed that was so highly enriched but the Los Alamos Laboratory required 95 percent For a time product was mixed with feed to reduce the enrichment to 30 percent Taking the concentration up to 95 percent raised safety concerns as there was the risk of a criticality accident 92 After some deliberation with opinions sought and obtained from Percival Keith Norris Bradbury Darol Froman Elmer E Kirkpatrick Kenneth Nichols and Edward Teller 93 it was decided that this could be done safely if appropriate precautions were taken On 28 November 1946 the K 25 plant began producing 94 percent product At this point they ran into a serious flaw in the gaseous diffusion concept enrichment in uranium 235 also enriched the product in the unwanted and fairly useless uranium 234 making it difficult to raise the enrichment to 95 percent On 6 December 1946 production was dropped back to a steady 2 56 kilograms 5 6 lb per day enriched to 93 7 percent uranium 235 along with 1 9 percent uranium 234 This was regarded as a satisfactory product by the Los Alamos Laboratory so on 26 December 1946 enrichment activity at Y 12 was curtailed The Manhattan Project ended a few days later Responsibility for the K 25 facility then passed to the new Atomic Energy Commission on 1 January 1947 94 Workers at the plant were represented by the Oil Chemical and Atomic Workers International Union OCAW 95 Closure and demolition edit nbsp The K 25 complex in 2006 K 25 became a prototype for other gaseous diffusion facilities established in the early post war years The first of these was the 374 000 square foot 34 700 m2 K 27 completed in September 1945 It was followed by the 15 acre 6 1 ha K 29 in 1951 the 20 acre 8 1 ha K 31 in 1951 and the 32 acre 13 ha K 33 in 1954 96 Further gaseous diffusion facilities were built at Paducah Kentucky in 1952 97 and Portsmouth Ohio in 1954 98 The K 25 plant was renamed the Oak Ridge Gaseous Diffusion Plant in 1955 99 Today uranium isotope separation is usually done by the more energy efficient ultra centrifuge process 100 developed in the Soviet Union after World War II by Soviet and captured German engineers working in detention 101 The centrifuge process was the first isotope separation method considered for the Manhattan project but was abandoned due to technical challenges early in the project When German scientists and engineers were released from Soviet captivity in the mid 1950s the West became aware of the ultra centrifuge design and began shifting uranium enrichment to this much more efficient process As centrifuge technology advanced it became possible to carry out uranium enrichment on a smaller scale without the vast resources that were necessary to build and operate 1940s and 1950s K and Y style separation plants a development which had the effect of increasing nuclear proliferation concerns 102 nbsp Demolition of K 25 in progress in April 2012 Centrifuge cascades began operating at Oak Ridge in 1961 A gas centrifuge test facility K 1210 opened in 1975 followed by a larger centrifuge plant demonstration facility K 1220 in 1982 In response to an order from President Lyndon B Johnson to cut production of enriched uranium by 25 percent K 25 and K 27 ceased production in 1964 but in 1969 K 25 began producing uranium enriched to 3 to 5 percent for use in nuclear reactors Martin Marietta Energy replaced Union Carbide as the operator in 1984 Gaseous diffusion ceased on 27 August 1985 The Oak Ridge Gaseous Diffusion Plant was renamed the Oak Ridge K 25 Site in 1989 and the East Tennessee Technology Park in 1996 99 Production of enriched uranium using gaseous diffusion ceased in Portsmouth in 2001 and at Paducah in 2013 103 Nowadays all commercial uranium enrichment in the United States is carried out using gas centrifuge technology 104 The United States Department of Energy DOE contracted with British Nuclear Fuels Ltd BNFL in 1997 to decontaminate and decommission the facilities Its subsidiary Reactor Sites Management Company Limited RSMC was acquired by EnergySolutions in June 2007 Initially K 29 K 31 and K 33 were to be retained for other uses but it was subsequently decided to demolish them Bechtel Jacobs the environmental management contractor assumed responsibility for the facility in July 2005 Demolition of K 29 began in January 2006 and was completed in August 96 Demolition of K 33 began in January 2011 and was completed ahead of schedule in September 2011 105 It was followed by the demolition of K 31 which began on 8 October 2014 106 and was completed on 26 June 2015 107 Demolition of the K 1206 F Water Tower nbsp nbsp nbsp Bechtel Jacobs was contracted to dismantle and demolish the K 25 facility in September 2008 The contract valued at 1 48 billion was made retrospective to October 2007 108 and ended in August 2011 Since then demolition work has been carried out by DOE s current environmental management contractor URS CH2M Hill Oak Ridge UCOR 109 Demolition of the K 25 facility was expected to be completed by July 2014 110 By 23 January 2013 demolition of the north and west wings was complete with only a small portion of the east wing remaining 6 units out of 24 on the east wing 111 The final section of the east wing was brought down on 19 December 2013 The last debris was removed in 2014 112 Demolition of K 27 the last of the five gaseous diffusion facilities at Oak Ridge began in February 2016 113 US Senator Lamar Alexander and US Congressman Chuck Fleischmann joined 1 500 workers to watch the final wall come down on 30 August 2016 Its demolition was completed on 28 February 2017 114 Since 2020 the K 25 site is being redeveloped in part into a general aviation airport to service the city of Oak Ridge The project is a joint effort between Oak Ridge city officials the Tennessee Department of Transportation the Appalachian Regional Commission the DOE and the Federal Aviation Administration 115 Several small private nuclear facilities are also planned on the site 116 117 118 Commemoration editOn 27 February 2020 the K 25 History Center a 7 500 square foot museum opened at the site The museum is a branch of the American Museum of Science and Energy AMSE and features hundreds of original artifacts and interactive exhibits related to the K 25 site 119 120 121 Notes edit Manhattan District History Atomic Energy Commission 1948 Book II Gaseous Diffusion K 25 Project Volume 4 1 a b c Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 10 14 Rhodes 1986 pp 251 254 Rhodes 1986 pp 256 263 Jones 1985 p 12 Bohr Niels Wheeler John Archibald September 1939 The Mechanism of Nuclear Fission Phys Rev 56 5 American Physical Society 426 450 Bibcode 1939PhRv 56 426B doi 10 1103 PhysRev 56 426 Wheeler amp Ford 1998 pp 27 28 Manhattan District 1947a p S1 Manhattan District 1947a p 2 1 a b c Smyth 1945 p 172 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 p 22 Nier Alfred O Booth E T Dunning J R von Grosse A 3 March 1940 Nuclear Fission of Separated Uranium Isotopes Physical Review 57 6 546 Bibcode 1940PhRv 57 546N doi 10 1103 PhysRev 57 546 S2CID 4106096 Nier Alfred O Booth E T Dunning J R von Grosse A 13 April 1940 Further Experiments on Fission of Separated Uranium Isotopes Physical Review 57 8 748 Bibcode 1940PhRv 57 748N doi 10 1103 PhysRev 57 748 Rhodes 1986 pp 322 325 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 p 42 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 22 23 a b Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 30 31 a b c Jones 1985 p 152 Manhattan District 1947a p S2 a b Beaton L 1962 The slow down in nuclear explosive production New Scientist 16 309 141 143 Retrieved 20 November 2010 Glossary of High Energy Weapons Terms Nuclear Weapons Archive Retrieved 8 June 2016 Uranium Hexafluoride Source Appendix A of the PEIS DOE EIS 0269 Physical Properties Argonne National Laboratory Archived from the original on 29 March 2016 Retrieved 8 June 2016 Olah GH Welch J 1978 Synthetic methods and reactions 46 Oxidation of organic compounds with uranium hexafluoride in haloalkane solutions Journal of the American Chemical Society 100 17 5396 402 doi 10 1021 ja00485a024 Berry JA Poole RT Prescott A Sharp DW Winfield JM 1976 The oxidising and fluoride ion acceptor properties of uranium hexafluoride in acetonitrile Journal of the Chemical Society Dalton Transactions 3 272 274 doi 10 1039 DT9760000272 a b Manhattan District 1947a pp S2 S3 a b c d e f g Jones 1985 pp 150 151 Smyth 1945 p 175 a b Corporate Partners Atomic Heritage Foundation Retrieved 1 October 2014 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 122 125 Smyth 1945 p 173 a b Manhattan NY Atomic Heritage Foundation Retrieved 8 June 2016 Response to letter from Mr Gus Robinson to General Nichols providing information relating to Site designations and Site codes for Manhattan District facilities 10 17 1949 Series Correspondence Files 1923 1978 National Archives and Records Administration 17 October 1949 Retrieved 7 June 2016 Prince R P Stanley A Milton 2000 What Does K 25 Stand For Deciphering the Origins of the Manhattan Project Code Names in Oak Ridge PDF The Journal of East Tennessee History 72 82 86 ISSN 1058 2126 Retrieved 7 June 2016 a b K T Keller s Interview Part 2 Manhattan Project Voices Retrieved 13 June 2016 a b Manhattan Project Spotlight The Chrysler Corporation Retrieved 13 June 2016 Manhattan District 1947b pp 5 1 5 3 a b Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 p 101 a b c Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 p 125 Percival Keith s Interview Manhattan Project Voices Retrieved 13 June 2016 Edward Norris Atomic Heritage Foundation Retrieved 13 June 2016 a b Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 126 129 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 132 134 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 136 138 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 p 138 Hewlett amp Anderson 1962 pp 139 140 Manhattan District 1947c pp 6 1 6 2 a b Groves 1962 pp 112 113 History of J A Jones Inc FundingUniverse Retrieved 10 June 2016 a b c Jones 1985 pp 160 161 a b Manhattan District 1947d p H1 a b Manhattan District 1947d p S17 Jones 1985 pp 383 384 a b Manhattan District 1947c pp 6 3 6 4 Manhattan District 1947d p S4 a b c d Powerhouse area S 50 K 25 Virtual Museum Retrieved 10 June 2016 a b Manhattan District 1947d p 3 21 Jones 1985 pp 384 385 Manhattan District 1947d pp 3 10 3 12 Jones 1985 pp 440 442 a b c Manhattan District 1947d p S14 Manhattan District 1947d p 3 15 Manhattan District 1947d p 3 64 Manhattan District 1947d pp 3 8 3 9 a b c Jones 1985 p 161 a b c Manhattan District 1947d pp 3 28 3 29 Jones 1985 p 158 Manhattan District 1947e p S3 a b c d e f g K 25 Virtual Museum Site Tour Department of Energy Retrieved 12 June 2016 Manhattan District 1947d pp 3 67 3 68 Manhattan District 1947d pp 3 72 3 75 Manhattan District 1947d p 5 3 a b c d Manhattan District 1947d pp 3 31 3 41 a b Manhattan District 1947e p S5 a b Manhattan District 1947e pp 2 6 2 7 12 6 Manhattan District 1947d p 3 40 Manhattan District 1947f p 5 Johnston Louis Williamson Samuel H 2023 What Was the U S GDP Then MeasuringWorth Retrieved 30 November 2023 United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the MeasuringWorth series a b Jones 1985 p 165 McKinney Wayne 3 August 2013 Water tower at East Tennessee Technology Park demolished Press release UCOR Retrieved 22 February 2022 Manhattan District 1947c p 7 1 Jones 1985 p 157 Manhattan District 1947d p 3 2 Jones 1985 p 162 a b Manhattan District 1947e pp S1 S3 Manhattan District 1947e pp 2 4 2 6 12 5 a b Jones 1985 pp 166 168 Jones 1985 p 148 a b Jones 1985 p 169 Manhattan District 1947g pp 1 2 Jones 1985 p 183 Jones 1985 pp 522 535 538 Manhattan District 1947f pp 1 7 Manhattan District 1947f pp 16 20 Manhattan District 1947f pp 8 10 Bischak Greg 1989 Facing the Second Generation of the Nuclear Weapons Complex Renewal of the Nuclear Production Base or Economic Conversion In Dumas Lloyd J Thee Marek eds Making Peace Possible The Promise of Economic Conversion Peace Research Monograph Vol 19 Pergamon Press p 115 ISBN 0 08 037252X Retrieved 20 March 2022 a b East Tennessee Technology Park Global Security Retrieved 7 June 2016 Paducah Site Department of Energy Retrieved 7 June 2016 Portsmouth Centrus Energy Corp Retrieved 7 June 2016 a b K 25 Virtual Museum K 25 Story Timeline Department of Energy Retrieved 7 June 2016 Isotope Separation Methods Atomic Heritage Foundation Retrieved 7 June 2016 Kemp 2012 pp 281 287 Kemp 2012 pp 291 297 Gaseous Diffusion Plants Centrus Energy Corp Retrieved 7 June 2016 Uranium Enrichment United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission Retrieved 17 July 2020 Department of Energy Completes Demolition of K 33 Building Largest Completed Demo Project in Oak Ridge History Department of Energy 20 September 2011 Archived from the original on 23 June 2016 Retrieved 7 June 2016 Demolition of K 31 gaseous diffusion building begins Department of Energy 8 October 2014 Retrieved 7 June 2016 DOE completes demolition of K 31 gaseous diffusion building Department of Energy 26 June 2015 Retrieved 7 June 2016 Munger Frank 24 September 2008 DOE and Bechtel Jacobs sign 1 48B cleanup contract Knoxville News Sentinel Archived from the original on 1 March 2014 Retrieved 14 February 2009 East Tennessee Technology Park Fact Sheet PDF DOE Oak Ridge Environmental Management Program Archived from the original PDF on 4 August 2016 Retrieved 29 August 2013 Oak Ridge Finds Ways to Remove K 25 Faster Cheaper Department of Energy 1 February 2012 Archived from the original on 2 February 2014 Retrieved 29 August 2013 Oak Ridge EM Program Completes K 25 North End Demolition Department of Energy 23 January 2013 Archived from the original on 17 June 2013 Retrieved 29 August 2013 DOE UCOR demolish last piece of K 25 once the world s largest building Oak Ridge Today 19 December 2013 Retrieved 19 January 2014 K 27 Demolition Will Fulfill DOE s Vision 2016 Department of Energy 8 February 2016 Retrieved 7 June 2016 EM Marks Another Building Demolition at Oak Ridge Department of Energy 28 February 2017 Retrieved 27 May 2017 Pounds Benjamin 10 March 2021 More steps taken toward creation of new airport The Tennessean Retrieved 5 April 2021 Silas Sloan US nuclear fuel manufacturer will open 13 million production facility in Oak Ridge knoxnews com Knoxville News Sentinel Retrieved 2 March 2022 Benjamin Pounds Making plans hiring people for the Hermes reactor oakridger com The Oak Ridger Retrieved 3 March 2022 Crocker Brittany Oak Ridge Medical isotope producer to be built on decontaminated land near old uranium production plant knoxnews com Knoxville News Sentinel Retrieved 3 March 2022 Oak Ridge Opens K 25 History Center to Preserve Site s Rich History Department of Energy Retrieved 10 December 2022 K 25 History Center American Museum of Science and Energy American Museum of Science and Energy Retrieved 10 December 2022 K 25 History Museum Stay on the Job Finish the Job K 25 History Center Retrieved 10 December 2022 References editGroves Leslie 1962 Now It Can Be Told The Story of the Manhattan Project New York Harper ISBN 0 306 70738 1 OCLC 537684 Hewlett Richard G Anderson Oscar E 1962 The New World 1939 1946 PDF University Park Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 0 520 07186 7 OCLC 637004643 Retrieved 26 March 2013 Jones Vincent 1985 Manhattan The Army and the Atomic Bomb PDF Washington D C United States Army Center of Military History OCLC 10913875 Archived from the original PDF on 7 October 2014 Retrieved 25 August 2013 Kemp R Scott April 2012 The End of Manhattan How the Gas Centrifuge Changed the Quest for Nuclear Weapons Technology and Culture 53 2 272 305 doi 10 1353 tech 2012 0046 ISSN 0040 165X S2CID 109799217 Manhattan District 1947a Manhattan District History Book II Gaseous Diffusion K 25 Project Volume 1 General Features PDF Washington D C Manhattan District Manhattan District 1947b Manhattan District History Book II Gaseous Diffusion K 25 Project Volume 2 Research PDF Washington D C Manhattan District Manhattan District 1947c Manhattan District History Book II Gaseous Diffusion K 25 Project Volume 3 Design PDF Washington D C Manhattan District Manhattan District 1947d Manhattan District History Book II Gaseous Diffusion K 25 Project Volume 4 Construction PDF Washington D C Manhattan District Manhattan District 1947e Manhattan District History Book II Gaseous Diffusion K 25 Project Volume 5 Operation PDF Washington D C Manhattan District Manhattan District 1947f Manhattan District History Book II Gaseous Diffusion K 25 Project Volume 5 Operation Supplement No 1 PDF Washington D C Manhattan District Manhattan District 1947g Manhattan District History Book II Gaseous Diffusion K 25 Project Volume 5 Operation Appendix PDF Washington D C Manhattan District Rhodes Richard 1986 The Making of the Atomic Bomb London Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 671 44133 7 Smyth Henry DeWolf 1945 Atomic Energy for Military Purposes The Official Report on the Development of the Atomic Bomb under the Auspices of the United States Government 1940 1945 Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press OCLC 770285 Wheeler John Archibald Ford Kenneth 1998 Geons Black Holes and Quantum Foam A Life in Physics New York W W Norton amp Co ISBN 0 393 04642 7 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to K 25 K 25 History Center on site museum K 25 Virtual Museum Historic photos of K25 by Ed Westcott Demolition of the north end of the K 25 building Video Historic American Engineering Record HAER documentation filed under State Highway 58 Oak Ridge Anderson County TN HAER No TN 49 K 25 Plant Portal 4 20 photos 42 data pages 2 photo caption pages HAER No TN 51 K 25 Plant Building K 1037 6 photos 96 data pages 1 photo caption page Portals nbsp History of Science nbsp Nuclear technology nbsp United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title K 25 amp oldid 1218623479, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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