'Gaseous diffusion' is a technology used to produce
enriched uranium by forcing gaseous
uranium hexafluoride, UF
6, through
semi-permeable membranes. This produces a slight separation between the molecules containing
uranium-235 and uranium-238. By use of a large
cascade of many stages, high separations can be achieved. It was the first economic enrichment process to be successfully developed.
History
Gaseous diffusion was one of several uranium
isotope separation technologies developed as part of the
Manhattan Project.
Of the several separation technologies ultimately used by the Manhattan Project, gaseous diffusion was probably the most significant. The process buildings built for the cascades were then the largest ever constructed. The preparation of uranium hexafluoride feedstock (known as ''hex'' in the trade) was the first ever application for commercially produced
fluorine, and the problems addressed in handling both fluorine and ''hex'' as a corrosive gas were significant.
Large gaseous diffusion plants were constructed by the
United States of America, the
Soviet Union (including a plant now in
Kazakhstan), the
United Kingdom,
France and
China. Most of these have now closed or are expected to close, unable to compete economically with newer enrichment techniques. However some of the technology used in pumps and membranes remains secret, and some of the materials used remain subject to export controls as part of the continuing effort to control
nuclear proliferation.
The technique has largely been replaced by the newer
gas centrifuge technology, which requires far less energy to produce the same separation.
Technology
This process is based on the principle that in a closed box, all molecules have the same energy; therefore the lighter molecules, on average, travel faster than the heavier molecules. As a result, the lighter molecules strike the walls of a container more frequently than their heavier counterparts. If a portion of the container consists of a small hole large enough to permit the passage of individual gas molecules, but not so large that a mass flow-through of the gas can occur, then more light molecules than heavy molecules will pass out of the container, since rate of
effusion (diffusion to outside the box) is proportional to the inverse square of the mass. The gas leaving the container is somewhat enriched in the lighter molecules, while the residual gas is somewhat depleted.
A single container where the enrichment process takes place through gaseous diffusion is called a diffuser. It does not contain one hole, however, but has a porous barrier.
Uranium, of course, is not a gas, and the diffusion enrichment of uranium is carried out using
uranium hexafluoride. While this substance is solid at room temperature, it is easily vaporized. However, this requires that all components of a diffusion plant be maintained at an appropriate temperature to assure that UF
6 remains in gaseous form. While UF
6 is a stable compound, it is highly reactive with water and corrosive to most common metals. As a consequence, internal gaseous pathways must be fabricated from
nickel, or
austenitic stainless steel, and the entire system must be leak tight.
Teflon was used to coat the valves and seals. Despite its unpleasant characteristics, UF
6 is the only compound of uranium sufficiently volatile to be used in the gaseous diffusion process.
Fortunately, fluorine consists of only a single isotope
19F, so that the difference in molecular weights of different molecules of UF
6 is due only to the difference in weights of the uranium isotopes. However, because the molecular weights of
235UF
6 and
238UF
6 are so nearly equal, very little separation of the
235U and
238U is effected by a single pass through a barrier, that is, in one diffuser. It is necessary, therefore, to connect a great many diffusers together in a sequence of stages, using the outputs of each stage as the inputs for two adjoining stages. Such a sequence of stages is called a ''cascade''. In practice, diffusion cascades require thousands of stages, depending on the desired product enrichment.
There are two types of barriers on which information is available: Film-type and Aggregate. Film-type barriers are made by boring pores through an initially nonporous medium. One way this can be done is by removing one constituent in an alloy, for instance using HCl to remove the
zinc from AgZn. Aggregate barriers are made by agglomerating or sintering powders: the barriers used in the USA are in the form of sintered nickel tubes.
The gas must be compressed at each stage to make up for a loss in pressure across the diffuser. This leads to compression heating of the gas, which then must be cooled before entering the diffuser. The requirements for pumping and cooling make diffusion plants enormous consumers of electricity.
See also
★
USEC
★
nuclear fuel cycle
★
Calutron
★
gas centrifuge
★
AVLIS
★
K-25 (in
Oak Ridge, Tennessee)
★
Liquid Thermal Diffusion
External links
★
Annotated references on gaseous diffusion from the Alsos Library