(Redirected from Met Lab)
The 'Metallurgical Laboratory' or "Met Lab" at the
University of Chicago was part of the
World War II–era
Manhattan Project, created by the
United States to develop an
atomic bomb.
History
In July
1939, at the urging of
physicists
Eugene Wigner and
Leó Szilárd,
Albert Einstein sent a letter to President
Franklin Delano Roosevelt explaining the
military potential of
nuclear fission and calling for the United States to develop atomic weapons before
Nazi Germany did.
In response, Roosevelt appointed a committee to direct the research. Early funding was meager, but in
1940, scientists at
Columbia University and the
University of California were able to demonstrate the weapons potential of the
isotope uranium-235 and the newly-discovered
element plutonium.
Immediately after the
Japanese attack on
Pearl Harbor on
December 7,
1941,
Nobel Prize laureate
Arthur H. Compton quickly gained support for consolidating plutonium research at Chicago and for an ambitious schedule that called for producing the first atomic bomb in January
1945, a goal that was missed by only six months.
"Metallurgical Laboratory" was the "cover" name given to Compton's facility. Its objectives were to produce
chain-reacting "piles" of uranium to convert to plutonium, find ways to separate the plutonium from the uranium and to design a bomb.
In August
1942, a team of scientists under
Glenn T. Seaborg isolated the first weighable amount of plutonium from uranium
irradiated in
cyclotrons. Meanwhile, work continued under the renowned
Italian physicist
Enrico Fermi to build uranium and
graphite piles that could be brought to
critical mass in a controlled, self-sustaining
nuclear reaction.
A labor strike prevented the construction of the piles at a laboratory in the
Argonne forest preserve, so Fermi and his associates
Martin Whittaker and
Walter Zinn set about building the piles (really the world's first "
nuclear reactor," although that term was not used until
1952) in a
racquets court under the abandoned west stands of the university’s
Alonzo Stagg Field. The piles consisted of uranium pellets as a
neutron–producing "core" separated from one another by graphite blocks to slow the neutrons. Fermi himself described the apparatus as "a crude pile of black bricks and wooden timbers." The controls consisted of
cadmium-coated rods that absorbed neutrons. Withdrawing the rods would increase neutron activity in the pile to lead to a self-sustaining chain reaction. Re-inserting the rods would dampen the reaction.
On
December 2,
1942,
Chicago Pile 1 (CP-1) was ready for a demonstration. Before a group of dignitaries, a young scientist named
George Weil worked the final control rod while Fermi carefully monitored the neutron activity. The pile went critical at 3:20 p.m. Fermi shut it down 33 minutes later. In
1943, he rebuilt the pile as CP-2 at the Argonne Laboratory.
The stadium was demolished in 1957. The location is commemorated as the ''Site of the First Self-Sustaining Nuclear Reaction'', a
National Historic Landmark, featuring a sculpture by
Henry Moore.
Notes
1. National Register Information System
External links
★
''The First Pile'' by Corbin Allardice and Edward R. Trapnell
★
Manhattan Project Signature Facilities
★
Oak Ridge National Laboratory Review
★
Chicago Pile 1 Pioneers
★
The First Pile
★
The Manhattan Project: Making the Atomic Bomb