Ames Process The first item on the agenda was to find uranium for the nuclear reactor that
Enrico Fermi was proposing to build. Uranium ore was readily available. Some of high-grade ore from the
Belgian Congo was in storage in a warehouse at
Port Richmond on
Staten Island. About per annum was being mined at the
Eldorado Mine at
Port Radium on the
Great Bear Lake near the Arctic Circle in Canada's
Northwest Territories. The
Eldorado company also operated a refinery at
Port Hope, Ontario, where Canadian and Belgian ore was refined. The Manhattan Project's estimated requirements for 1942 were , of which Compton required just for his proposed nuclear reactor. The major problem was impurities in the uranium oxide, which could act as
neutron poisons and prevent a nuclear chain reaction. Due to the presence of impurities, references published before 1942 typically listed its melting point at around when pure uranium metal actually melts at . Peter P. Alexander, at Metal Hydrides Incorporated, gave in 1938 the first indications that the melting point of uranium was "as low as and even somewhat lower". The most effective way to purify uranium oxide in a laboratory was to take advantage of the fact that
uranium nitrate is soluble in
ether. Scaling this process up for industrial production was a dangerous proposition; ether was explosive, and a factory using large quantities was likely to blow up or burn down. Compton and Spedding turned to
Mallinckrodt in
St. Louis,
Missouri, which had experience with ether. Spedding went over the details with Mallinckrodt's chemical engineers, Henry V. Farr and John R. Ruhoff, on 17 April 1942. Within a few months, sixty tons of highly pure uranium oxide was produced. The only uranium metal available commercially was produced by the
Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company, using a photochemical process. Uranium oxide was reacted with
potassium fluoride in large vats on the roof of Westinghouse's plant in
Bloomfield, New Jersey. This produced ingots the size of a
quarter that were sold for around $20 per gram. But
Edward Creutz, the head of the Metallurgical Laboratory's group responsible for fabricating the uranium, wanted a metal sphere the size of an orange for his experiments. With Westinghouse's process, it would have cost $200,000 and taken a year to produce. The hydride or "hydramet" process, developed by Alexander used
calcium hydride as the
reducing agent for the conversion of uranium ore to metal. By this means the Metal Hydrides plant in
Beverly, Massachusetts, managed to produce a few pounds of uranium metal. Unfortunately, the calcium hydride contained unacceptable amounts of
boron, a neutron poison, making the metal unsuitable for use in a reactor. Some months would pass before Clement J. Rodden from the
National Bureau of Standards and
Union Carbide figured out a means to produce sufficiently pure calcium hydride. Spedding and Wilhelm began looking for ways to create the uranium metal. At the time, it was produced in the form of a powder, and was highly
pyrophoric. It could be pressed and
sintered and stored in cans, but to be useful, it needed to be melted and cast. Casting presented difficulty because uranium corroded
crucibles of beryllium, magnesia and graphite. To produce uranium metal, they tried reducing uranium oxide with hydrogen, but this did not work. While most of the neighboring elements on the
periodic table can be reduced to form pure metal and
slag, uranium did not behave this way. In June 1942 they then tried reducing the uranium with carbon in a hydrogen atmosphere, with only moderate success. They then tried aluminum, magnesium and calcium, all of which were unsuccessful. The following month the Ames team found that molten uranium could be cast in a
graphite container. Although graphite was known to react with uranium, this could be managed because the carbide formed only where the two touched. Around this time, someone from the Manhattan Project's
Berkeley Radiation Laboratory brought a cube of
uranium tetrafluoride—the uranium compound being used in the
calutrons—to the Metallurgical Laboratory to discuss the possibility of using it rather than uranium oxide in the reactor. Spedding began wondering whether it would be possible to produce uranium metal from this
salt, bypassing the problems with oxygen. He took the cube back to Ames, and asked Wilhelm to investigate. The task was assigned to an associate, Wayne H. Keller. He investigated a process (now known as the
Ames process) originally developed by J. C. Goggins and others at the
University of New Hampshire in 1926. This involved mixing
uranium tetrachloride (from which
Eugène-Melchior Péligot first prepared pure uranium by reduction with
potassium in 1841) and
calcium metal in a
calcium oxide-lined steel pressure vessel (known as a "bomb") and heating it. Keller was able to reproduce Goggin's results on 3 August 1942, creating a button of very pure uranium metal. The process was then scaled up. By September, bombs were being prepared in steel pipes long, lined with
lime to prevent corrosion, and containing up to of uranium tetrafluoride. C. F. Gray took these ingots and cast them into a billet of pure uranium.
Production On 24 September 1942, Wilhelm took the ingot to Spedding at the Metallurgical Laboratory in Chicago and presented it to Compton, whose first reaction was of disbelief. He thought it must be hollow. Spedding had the ingot cut open. It was not hollow. A few days later, the Metallurgical Laboratory's director, Richard L. Doan, went to Ames, where he drew up an
Office of Scientific Research and Development (OSRD) contract for the Ames Project to produce of pure uranium metal a day. This would be a pilot plant, with the process eventually being transferred to industry. The OSRD contract was superseded by a Manhattan Project contract in November 1942. The initial contract was for $50,000. By 31 December 1945, the face value of contracts let to the Ames Project totaled $6.907 million; but the work was carried out for $4 million. Wilhelm found an old wooden building on the southeastern edge of the campus. It had been a home economics building until 1926, and then had served as a women's gymnasium until a new one was built in 1941; by 1942 it was mainly used for storage. The building was handed over to the Ames Project, and the wooden floor replaced with a concrete one, much to the disappointment of the university architect, who had been trying for some years to get the place torn down. The building officially became known as the Physical Chemistry Annex; local people called it "Little Ankeny", after the nearby town of
Ankeny, Iowa, where there was an ordnance plant. Looking for machine tools, Wilhelm found a machine shop for sale in Ames. The owner, Bill Maitland, had once made gardening tools, but could no longer obtain the metal he needed due to wartime rationing. Wilhelm bought it for $8,000. The Metallurgical Laboratory supplied two large 40-
kilowatt reduction furnaces. The Ames Project supplied two tons of uranium metal to the Metallurgical Laboratory for the construction of
Chicago Pile-1, the world's first nuclear reactor, which achieved
criticality on 2 December 1942. The Ames Project would later supply over 90 percent of the uranium for the
X-10 Graphite Reactor at the
Clinton Engineer Works in
Oak Ridge, Tennessee. Production rose from of uranium metal per day in December 1942 to per day by the middle of January 1943. For production, the process was changed to use magnesium instead of calcium; magnesium was cheaper, more readily available, and purer. But it was also harder to start the reaction with magnesium than calcium, requiring more heating. The uranium tetrafluoride, known as green salt because of its characteristic color, was supplied by Mallinckrodt,
DuPont and Harshaw Chemical, and was ground up on arrival, as was the magnesium. Bombs were normally pipes, long, although pipes, long, could be used to produce ingots. They were heated to for 40 to 60 minutes, after which the mixture spontaneously reacted, reaching temperatures of . A microphone was used to detect the ignition, and the bomb would be moved to a spray chamber to cool. If everything worked, uranium metal biscuit and
magnesium fluoride slag would be produced. After the bomb cooled, it would be opened and hammered until the two separated. The resulting biscuit would be stamped, and sent off to be cast. Casting re-shaped the uranium into ingots and removed impurities. The metal biscuits were melted in a graphite crucible and poured into a mold. This produced rods between in diameter and long. The rods were stamped with a number and placed in wooden boxes for shipping to the Metallurgical Laboratory. From there they were sent to the Oak Ridge or the
Hanford Site. By July 1943, the Ames Project was producing of uranium metal per month. The cost of a pound of uranium metal fell from $1,000 to around one dollar. Starting in July 1943, Mallinckrodt, Electromet, and DuPont began producing uranium by the Ames process, and Ames phased out its own production by early 1945. The Ames Project began a program of recovering uranium metal from scrap. A new building, known as Physical Chemistry Annex 2, was constructed for the purpose in 1944. Uranium turnings were washed, dried, passed through a magnet to remove iron impurities, and pressed into briquettes. They were then sent to be remelted. The job was handed over to Metal Hydrides and a recovery plant at the Hanford Site in December 1945, by which time the Ames Project had recovered of scrap metal. In all, the Ames Project produced over of uranium metal. All production ceased on 5 August 1945, as did that at Metal Hydrides and DuPont, leaving Mallinckrodt as the only producer of uranium metal in the early post-war period. ==Other metals==