In 1945, Wigner accepted a position as the director of research at the Clinton Laboratories in
Oak Ridge, Tennessee, which then had a staff of about 800. He took with him his protégés
Gale Young,
Katherine Way and Weinberg. Weinberg, who was the first to arrive at Oak Ridge in May 1945, became head of the Physics Division in 1946. But after the
Atomic Energy Commission took over responsibility for the laboratory's operations from the Manhattan Project at the start of 1947, Wigner, feeling unsuited to a managerial role in the new environment, left Oak Ridge at the end of summer in 1947 and returned to Princeton University. The administration of the Clinton Laboratories passed from
Monsanto to the University of Chicago in May 1947, and then to
Union Carbide in December 1947. The Atomic Energy Commission's influential General Advisory Committee, chaired by
J. Robert Oppenheimer, recommended that all work on reactors be concentrated at the
Argonne National Laboratory, the successor to the Metallurgical Laboratory, near Chicago. There was also competition for staff and resources from the newly established
Brookhaven National Laboratory near New York. Morale was low, and no one could be found to take on the job of director of research at the laboratory, renamed the
Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) in January 1948. At least six people turned down the job before Union Carbide's acting Director, Nelson (Bunny) Rucker, asked Weinberg to become Director of Research in March 1948. Weinberg was subsequently appointed director in 1955. He often sat in the front row at ORNL division information meetings and he would ask the first, often very penetrating, question after each scientific talk. For young scientists giving their first presentation, the experience could be frightening, but it was also exciting and stimulating. When asked how he found the time to attend every meeting, Weinberg replied jokingly, "We didn't have a
DOE in those days." Weinberg had the
Materials Testing Reactor converted into a mock-up of a real reactor called the
Low Intensity Test Reactor (LITR) or "Poor Man's Pile". Experiments at the LITR led to the design of both pressurized water reactors (PWRs) and
boiling water reactors (BWRs), which have since become the dominant reactor types in commercial
nuclear power plants. Weinberg was attracted to the simplicity and self-controlling features of nuclear reactors that used fluid fuels, such as
Harold Urey and Eugene Wigner's proposed
Aqueous Homogeneous Reactor. Therefore, to support the Nuclear Aircraft project in the late 1940s, Weinberg asked ORNL's reactor engineers to design a reactor using liquid instead of solid fuel. This
Homogeneous Reactor Experiment (HRE) was affectionately dubbed "Alvin's 3P reactor" because it required a pot, a pipe, and a pump. The HRE went into operation in 1950 and, at the
criticality party, Weinberg brought the appropriate spirits: "When piles go critical in Chicago, we celebrate with wine. When piles go critical in Tennessee, we celebrate with
Jack Daniel's." idea of nuclear-powered aircraft. The
Molten-Salt Reactor Experiment (MSRE) set a record for continuous operation and was the first to use Thorium irradiated to produce uranium-233 as fuel. It also used
plutonium-239 and the standard, naturally occurring
uranium-235. The MSR was known as the "chemist's reactor" because it was proposed mainly by chemists (ORNL's Ray Briant and Ed Bettis (an engineer) and NEPA's Vince Calkins), and because it used a chemical solution of melted
salts containing the
actinides (uranium, thorium, and/or plutonium) in a carrier salt, most often composed of
beryllium (BeF2) and
lithium (LiF) (isotopically depleted in
Lithium-6 to prevent excessive neutron capture or tritium production) –
FLiBe. The MSR also afforded the opportunity to change the chemistry of the molten salt while the reactor was operating to remove fission products and add new fuel or change the fuel, all of which is called "online processing".
Biological and environmental studies Under Weinberg's tenure as director, ORNL's
Biology Division grew to five times the size of the next largest division. This division was charged with understanding how
ionizing radiation interacts with living things and to try to find ways to help them survive radiation damage, such as
bone marrow transplants. In the 1960s Weinberg also pursued new missions for ORNL, such as using nuclear energy to
desalinate seawater. He recruited
Philip Hammond from the
Los Alamos National Laboratory to further this mission and in 1970 started the first big ecology project in the United States: the
National Science Foundation – Research Applied to National Needs Environmental Program.
Leadership In 1958, Weinberg coauthored the first nuclear reactor textbook,
The Physical Theory of Neutron Chain Reactors, with Wigner. The following year, 1959, he was elected president of the
American Nuclear Society and, in 1960, began service on the
President's Science Advisory Committee under the
Eisenhower and
Kennedy administrations. Starting in 1945 with Patent #2,736,696, Weinberg, usually with Wigner, filed numerous patents on the
light water reactor (LWR) technology that has provided the United States' primary nuclear reactors. The main LWR types are Pressurized Water Reactors (PWRs) and
Boiling Water Reactors (BWRs), that serve in Naval propulsion and commercial nuclear power. In 1965 he was appointed vice president of Union Carbide's Nuclear Division. In a 1971 paper, Weinberg first used the term "
Faustian bargain" to describe nuclear energy: Weinberg was fired by the
Nixon administration from ORNL in 1973 after 18 years as the laboratory's director, because he continued to advocate increased nuclear safety and molten salt reactors (MSRs), instead of the Administration's chosen
Liquid Metal Fast Breeder Reactor (LMFBR) that the AEC's Director of Reactor Division,
Milton Shaw, was appointed to develop. Weinberg's firing effectively halted development of the MSR, as it was virtually unknown by other nuclear laboratories and specialists. There was a brief revival of MSR research at ORNL as part of the
Carter administration's nonproliferation interests, culminating in ORNL-TM-7207, "Conceptual Design Characteristics of a Denatured Molten-Salt Reactor with Once-Through Fueling", by Engel,
et al., which is still considered by many to be the "reference design" for commercial molten salt reactors. == After Oak Ridge ==