THE URANIUM PATH
TO THE BOMB
(1942-1944)
Events
The uranium path to the atomic bomb ran through Oak Ridge, Tennessee.
Only if the new plants built at Oak Ridge produced enough enriched
uranium-235 would a uranium bomb be
possible. General Groves
placed two methods into production: 1) electromagnetic,
based on the principle that charged particles of the lighter isotope would
be deflected more when passing through a magnetic field; and 2) gaseous
diffusion, based on the principle that molecules of the lighter
isotope, uranium-235, would pass more readily through a porous
barrier. Full-scale electromagnetic and gaseous diffusion production
plants were built at Oak Ridge at sites designated as "Y-12" and
"K-25",
respectively.
Both the Y-12 and K-25 plants converted new and untried laboratory
technologies directly to large-scale production processes. At Y-12,
the design continuously changed even
as construction was
ongoing. Once built, the Y-12 Alpha and Beta "racetracks"
went into full operation only
slowly, as numerous unanticipated design and equipment problems were
encountered. Originally expected to provide most of the uranium-235
requirements, the K-25 gaseous diffusion
plant, due to difficulties in fabricating a suitable barrier, was
cut back to a feeder process for Y-12 in the summer of 1943. The eventually-successful
operations at both Y-12 and K-25, however, remained very much in doubt well into
1944.
For this reason, the Army, with assistance from the
Navy,
also implemented the liquid thermal
diffusion method of uranium enrichment, in which the lighter
isotope concentrated near a heat source within a tall column, at the S-50 plant
on the K-25 site as a supplement and a backup. In the end, it took the combined efforts of
all three of these facilities to produce enough enriched uranium for the one and
only uranium atomic bomb produced during the war.
To learn more about any of these events associated with the uranium 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 "Plutonium Path to
the Bomb, 1942-1944."