The X-10 reactor was shut down in 1963 and declared a National Historical Landmark in 1965. The reactor face is still open to the public and a must see to anyone who visits Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Find out what else occurred on this day in science history.
Thursday, 7 November 2013
On This Day in Science History - November 4 - X-10 Reactor
On November 4, 1943, the X-10 nuclear reactor began operations. This reactor was the first reactor built to produce plutonium for the Manhattan Project. The reactor consisted of a 24 foot cube of graphite slabs surrounded by a thick concrete radiation shield. There were 1,248 horizontal holes drilled into the graphite to hold slugs of uranium fuel. These slugs would remain in the reactor to emit and absorb neutrons to convert uranium-238 into plutonium-239. After a period of time, operators would push an new uranium slug into the hole and shove the plutonium rich slug out the back for processing. The plutonium would be extracted and sent on to the Los Alamos facility.
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