Atomics International has its beginnings in Downey then moved to several locations in the western end of California's
San Fernando Valley in
Canoga Park. Since all of the Atomics International facilities involved radioactive materials to some extent, documentation is available regarding the historical operations at each site.
Downey Facility The Atomic Energy Research Development Group began operations in the North American Aviation plant located on Lakewood Drive in
Downey, California. They performed basic research and constructed at least one
aqueous homogeneous reactor named the
Water Boiler Neutron Source. The four watt reactor was shut down and moved to the
Santa Susana Field Laboratory in December 1955. The reactor-related facilities were examined and determined to be free of residual radioactivity and reused as general office space. The Downey facility was transferred to the City of Downey and the buildings subsequently demolished and replaced with a variety of commercial buildings.
Vanowen Boulevard Facility Atomics International occupied a building at the corner of Owensmouth Avenue and Vanowen Street in
Canoga Park,
California, adjacent to the
Rocketdyne Canoga facility. Principal work performed at the Vanowen facility included fuel development for the SNAP program, and radiochemistry. The site also supported the design, development and operation of two small
aqueous homogeneous reactors, the 5 watt L-47 reactor and the ten watt L-77 reactor. By 1960, both reactors were closed and the radioactive materials removed from the site. Atomics International moved to their new DeSoto Avenue headquarters and Rocketdyne assumed the control of the Vanowen building. The Vanowen building was demolished in 2007.
De Soto Avenue Facility In 1959, Atomics International established their headquarters at a complex of buildings located along De Soto Avenue in
Canoga Park, California. The De Soto facility hosted the operation of a ten watt L-77
aqueous homogeneous reactor, nuclear reactor fuel fabrication, a gamma irradiation facility, and a radiochemistry laboratory. All of the operations involving radioactive materials were removed by the mid-1990s. The property is now owned and operated by
Aerojet Rocketdyne.
Thompson-Ramo-Wooldridge Facility Space was leased from Thompson-Ramo-Wooldridge Inc, renamed
TRW in 1965, for nuclear research projects. It was located at Fallbrook Avenue and Roscoe Boulevard in Canoga Park (present day
West Hills).
Santa Susana Field Laboratory (SSFL), Area IV Facility From 1953 to 1989, three primary types of operations were conducted in the
Ventura County Simi Hills at
Santa Susana Field Laboratory (SSFL) Area IV: Development and testing of nuclear reactors, nuclear support operations, and non-nuclear energy research and development at the Energy Technology Engineering Center. The AOC requires the DOE to clean up both chemical and radiological contaminants to background concentrations within the underlying soils of the 290-acre Area IV. In May 2009, the US Environmental Protection Agency began a $41.5 million survey to determine the nature and extent of any radiological contamination within Area IV.
Development and testing of nuclear reactors : Between 1954 and 1980 at the Santa Susana Field Laboratory several nuclear reactors were built, tested and operated in Area IV. These included both nuclear reactors and critical test assemblies. A critical test assembly is a very low-power reactor that does not require an active cooling system and frequently requires a separate neutron source to maintain critical neutron flux. :*
Advanced Epithermal Thorium Reactor The Advanced Epithermal Thorium Reactor was built for the
Southwest Atomic Power Association at Building 100 in 1960. The AETR was used to test twenty different reactor core configurations by using an apparatus which supported a range of geometries. The AETR program was terminated in 1972. :*
Homogeneous Water Boiler-type Reactors Atomics International designed and built a range of low-power (5 to 50,000 watts thermal) nuclear reactors for research, training and isotope production purposes. This
aqueous homogeneous reactor type of low-power nuclear reactor used a 93% enriched uranyl sulphate solution held in a critical configuration in a spherical vessel. Reactivity was controlled using an arrangement of control rods within tubes penetrating the reactor vessel. The solution did not boil; rather, neutron and gamma flux caused radiolytic decomposition of water into hydrogen and oxygen in the form of tiny bubbles that gave the impression of boiling. One reactor model, the L-54, was purchased and installed by a number of United States universities and foreign research institutions, including Japan. The Japanese Atomic Research Institute renamed theirs Japan Research Reactor-1 (JRR-1) and the government of Japan issued a commemorative postage stamp noting the establishment of Japan's first nuclear reactor in 1957. The reactor was decommissioned in 1970 and is now maintained as a a museum exhibit with a Japanese-language website at
Tokaimura, Japan :*
Sodium Reactor Experiment (SRE) program : The Sodium Reactor Experiment (SRE) was an experimental nuclear reactor which operated from 1957 to 1964. On July 12, 1957, its electrical generating system produced the first electricity generated from a nuclear power system to supply a commercial power grid in the United States by powering homes in the nearby city of
Moorpark. In July 1959, the narrow internal cooling channels within the reactor fuel rod assemblies became obstructed by an unintended byproduct-produced organic contaminant, causing 13 of 43 reactor
fuel elements to partially melt in
an incident. Atomics International personnel repaired the reactor, which was restarted in September 1960 and operated with minor incidents until 1964. :*
Systems for Nuclear Auxiliary Power (SNAP) program : The objective of the
Systems for Nuclear Auxiliary Power program undertaken in 1955 by the United States was the development of compact, lightweight, reliable atomic electric devices for space, land and sea. The
Atomic Energy CommissionAEC (predecessor to the
Department of EnergyDOE), was the procurement agency for the
Department of Defense (DOD) and
National Aeronautics and Space AdministrationNASA requirements. The AEC was responsible for developing technologies that would allow the requirement to be fulfilled and for carrying out the initial phases of operational tests. From the period 1955 to 1973 when the program was terminated, approximately $850 million
then-years dollars were spent by the United States to develop the SNAP nuclear reactors. Atomics International was the prime contractor to the AEC for the development of the SNAP reactors. In the late 1950s to the early 1960s, Atomics International established a number of government-owned facilities to support the SNAP program at the Energy Technology Engineering Center (ETEC) in Area IV of the
Santa Susana Field Laboratory (SSFL). The
SNAP-10A was the only
nuclear reactor launched and flight tested by the United States. The City of Los Angeles issued a proclamation to recognize the accomplishment. The facilities included underground test facilities to test the compact SNAP nuclear reactors, non-nuclear test and support buildings, and administrative offices. Atomics International developed and tested five different SNAP reactors under the Systems for Nuclear Auxiliary Power Program. (SSFL), in the
Simi Hills. :*
Nuclear support operations At the Santa Susana Field Laboratory, approximately twenty facilities were designed and built in Area IV to manage radioactive materials in support of the nuclear reactor programs. These operations included fuel fabrication, storage and reprocessing, radioactive measurement and calibration and radioactive waste management and disposal preparation. As of January 2010, only the
Radioactive Materials Handling Facility remains in operation in support of the DOE's cleanup effort.
ETEC – Energy Technology Engineering Center The
Energy Technology Engineering Center (ETEC) specialized in the non-nuclear testing of components which were primarily designed to transfer heat from a nuclear reactor using liquid metals instead of water or gas. Atomics International operated the ETEC as a separate division at SSFL under contract to the
U.S. Department of Energy. The ETEC operated from 1966 to 1998. ==Ownership and licensing==