(Redirected from Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory)
The 'Idaho National Laboratory' ('INL') is an 890-square-mile (2,300-km²) complex located in the
Idaho desert between the towns of
Arco and
Idaho Falls, at . It was established in 1949 as the National Reactor Testing Station (NRTS). In 1975 the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) was divided into the Energy Research and Development Administration (ERDA) and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). The Idaho site was for a short time named ERDA and then subsequently renamed to the Idaho National Engineering Laboratory (INEL) in 1977 with the creation of the Department of Energy (DOE) under President Carter. In 1997, the name was changed again to the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory (INEEL). On
February 1,
2005,
Battelle Energy Alliance took over operation of the lab from
Bechtel, merged with Argonne West, and is now known as Idaho National Laboratory (INL). At this time the laboratory's clean-up activities were moved to a separate contract, the
Idaho Cleanup Project, which is managed by contractor CH2M-WG Idaho. Research activities were consolidated in the newly named Idaho National Laboratory. The lab currently employs about 8,000 people.
History
The original mission of NRTS was the development of
nuclear energy during the immediate post-war years. In 1951, one of the most significant events in the
20th century occurred at the NRTS — the first harnessing of atomic energy for generating electric power. This happened at the
Experimental Breeder Reactor Number 1 (EBR-1). The site of this event is memorialized as a Registered National Historic Landmark open to the public. On
July 17,
1955, reactors at the NRTS made
Arco, Idaho, the first town in the world to be powered by atomic energy.
On
January 3,
1961, the first fatal nuclear reactor accident in the United States occurred at the NRTS. An experimental reactor called
SL-1 (Stationary Low-Power Plant Number 1) was destroyed when a control rod was removed incorrectly leading to core meltdown and explosion. All three men working in the reactor were killed. Due to the extensive radioactive
isotope contamination, all three had to be buried in lead coffins. The events are the subject of a book published in 2003, Idaho Falls: The untold story of America's first nuclear accident.
[1]
INL operates the
Advanced Test Reactor, a facility used to radiate materials or test new components and fuels. Work at INL has included initial development of nuclear reactor designs, testing
experimental reactor designs, developing prototype reactors for ships in the
US Navy, and developing technologies to manage
nuclear waste.
Future
On
June 27,
2005 the
New York Times reported a reactor at INL would be used to manufacture
plutonium-238. This isotope is known for its intense
alpha decay, which is useful in making extremely long-lived power sources such as
Radioisotope thermoelectric generator (RTG)s for space probes and
heart pacemaker batteries. INL has 52 reactors, three of which are reportedly still operating (see
list of nuclear reactors). The ''
Idaho State Journal'' reported that the batteries would be used for a voyage to Jupiter's moons and the
New Horizons trip to Pluto.
[2]
In the
Energy Policy Act of 2005, $1.25 billion was authorized to design and construct a “Next Generation Power Plant Project” for electricity-hydrogen cogeneration at the Idaho National Laboratory, and possibly at existing reactors, to explore production of hydrogen fuel from nuclear power.
See also
★
SAPHIRE Probabilistic Risk Assessment software
★
nuclear reactor
★
list of nuclear reactors - the NRTS reactors are listed here
★
Advanced Test Reactor
★
LOFT (LOCA) - Loss of Fluid Tests, conducted at INL
References
1. Idaho Falls: The Untold Story of America's First Nuclear Accident, , William, McKeown, , ,
2. Argonne Lab is developing battery for NASA missions
External links
★
Idaho National Laboratory
★
Idaho Cleanup Project
★
Battelle Web site
★
Atomic Heritage Foundation
★
U.S. Geological Survey INL Project Office
Aerial Photo
★
Microsoft Terraserver