THE PLUTONIUM PATH TO THE BOMB
(1942-1944)
Events
Plutonium, produced in a uranium-fueled reactor (pile), was the second
path taken toward achieving an atomic bomb. Design work
on a full-scale plutonium production reactor began at the Met Lab in June
1942. Scientists at the Met Lab had the technical expertise to design a
production
pile, but construction and management on an industrial scale
required an outside
contractor. General Groves convinced the
DuPont Corporation to become the primary contractor for plutonium
production. With input from the Met Lab and DuPont, Groves selected
a site at Hanford, Washington, on the Columbia River, to build the
full-scale production reactors.
On December 2, 1942, on a racket court under the west grandstand at the
University of Chicago's Stagg Field, researchers headed by Enrico Fermi
achieved the first self-sustaining chain
reaction in a graphite and uranium pile known as CP-1. Using
theoretical information garnered from the operation of CP-1, DuPont
constructed an air-cooled experimental production reactor, known as X-10,
and a pilot chemical separation facility at Oak Ridge. The
separation facility, using methods
developed by Glenn
T. Seaborg and a team of researchers at the Met Lab, removed plutonium
from uranium irradiated in the X-10 reactor. Information from CP-1
was also useful to Met Lab scientists designing
the water-cooled plutonium production reactors for Hanford.
Construction at the site began in mid-1943. Three production reactors and
corresponding chemical separation plants were built, with the first
pile, the B Reactor, becoming operational in late September
1944. Los Alamos received its first plutonium from Hanford in early
February 1945.
To learn more about any of these events associated with the plutonium path to
the bomb, choose a web page from the menu below. To continue with a quick overview of the Manhattan Project, jump ahead to the
description of the final process of "Bringing It
All Together, 1942-1945."