Wikipedia:WikiProject National Register of Historic Places/NHLsandbox2

Coordinates: 46°37′49″N 119°38′51″W / 46.63028°N 119.64750°W / 46.63028; -119.64750
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Hanford B Reactor
LocationNear jct. of WA 24 and WA 240, Hanford Site
Nearest cityRichland, Washington
Built1944
ArchitectE.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co.
NRHP reference No.92000245
Significant dates
Added to NRHPApril 3, 1992
Designated NHL[[_____]], 2008

THIS IS A SANDBOX VERSION, ADAPTING FROM JULY 9 2008 LIVE PAGE. ADDING NHL LISTING NEWS.[1]

The B-Reactor at Hanford Site, Washington, was the first large-scale plutonium production reactor ever built. The project was commissioned under the Manhattan Project, during World War II, to develop the first nuclear weapons. It was designated a U.S. National Historic Landmark on ___, 2008.[1]

The reactor was designed and built by the DuPont company based on experimental designs tested by Enrico Fermi at the University of Chicago. It was designed to operate at 250 megawatts. The reactor was graphite moderated and water cooled. It consisted of a 28 by 36-foot, 1,200-ton graphite cylinder lying on its side, penetrated through its entire length horizontally by 2,004 aluminum tubes. Two hundred tons of uranium slugs the size of rolls of quarters and sealed in aluminum cans went into the tubes. Cooling water was pumped through the aluminum tubes around the uranium slugs at the rate of 75,000 gallons per minute. The reactor produced plutonium-239 by irradiating uranium-238 with neutrons.

The B Reactor was one of three reactors—along with the D and F reactors—built about six miles apart on the south bank of the Columbia River. The B-Reactor started production in September, 1944, the D-Reactor in December, 1944 and the F-Reactor in February, 1945. Each reactor had its own auxiliary facilities that included a river pump house, large storage and settling basins, a filtration plant, huge motor-driven pumps for delivering water to the face of the pile, and facilities for emergency cooling in case of a power failure.

The plutonium for the Trinity device, tested at Los Alamos in New Mexico, and the Fat Man bomb, later dropped on Nagasaki, Japan, was created in the B, D and F reactors. Additional reactors were constructed later, but the first three reactors ran for two decades. The B-Reactor was shut down in February 1968. It is now in "interim safe storage" mode. The D and F reactors were shut down in June, 1967 and June 1965, respectively. In a process called cocooning or entombment, the reactor buildings are demolished up to the four foot-thick concrete shield around the reactor core. Any openings are sealed and a new roof is built. The D and F reactors have already been entombed, as have the C and DR reactors. Most auxiliary buildings at the first three reactors have been demolished, as well. The H, K-East and K-West reactors and the N-Reactor are scheduled to be entombed in that order. There is interest in turning the B-Reactor into a museum, but if it is not, it will meet the same fate as the other reactors.

Sources[edit]

  1. ^ a b Michele S. Gerber; Brian Casserly; Frederick L. Brown (February 2007). "National Historic Landmark Nomination: B Reactor / 105-B; The 105-B Building in the 100-B/C Area at Hanford" (PDF). National Park Service.

External links[edit]

{{Registered Historic Places}}

[[Category:National Historic Landmarks in Washington]]
[[Category:History of physics]]
[[Category:Manhattan Project]]
[[Category:Graphite moderated reactors]]
[[Category:Nuclear history of the United States]]
[[Category:Nuclear weapons infrastructure of the United States]]
[[Category:Nuclear reactors]]

[[es:Reactor B]]