The proposed use for nuclear-powered ramjets would be to power a
cruise missile, called
Supersonic Low Altitude Missile (SLAM). It would have many advantages over other nuclear weapons delivery systems. It was estimated that the reactor would weigh between , permitting a payload of over . Operating at
Mach 3, or around and flying as low as , it would be invulnerable to interception by contemporary air defenses. It could carry more nuclear warheads than the sixteen aboard a
Polaris ballistic missile submarine, they could be larger, with
nuclear weapon yields of up to , and delivered with greater accuracy. Moreover, unlike an ICBM, it could be recalled. It was estimated that the
unit cost of each missile would be less than $5 million (equivalent to $ million in ), making them much cheaper than a
Boeing B-52 Stratofortress bomber. Operating costs would also be low, as keeping them in readiness would be cheaper than a submarine or bomber, and comparable with a
missile silo-based ICBM.
Range would not be unlimited, but would be determined by the fuel load. Merkle calculated that a MW-day of energy would burn about one gram of
highly enriched uranium. A 490 MW reactor with 50 kilograms of uranium would therefore burn 1 percent of its fuel each day. Assuming that an accumulation of
neutron poisons could be avoided, the missile could fly for several days. The success of the project depended upon a series of technological advances in
metallurgy and
materials science.
Pneumatic motors necessary to control the reactor in flight had to operate while red-hot and in the presence of intense
ionizing radiation. The need to maintain
supersonic speed at low altitude and in all kinds of weather meant that the missile would have to fly though much denser air. In turn, this meant that it would encounter much greater air resistance and have to generate more power to overcome it. The reactor, code-named "Tory", would therefore have to survive high temperatures that would melt the metals used in most
jet and
rocket engines. The solution arrived at was to use
ceramic fuel elements, extruded into hollow hexagonal rods. The
core of the reactor would be made of enriched uranium dispersed in
beryllium oxide (), the only available neutron moderator material that could withstand the high temperatures required. The Tory II-A reactor used a dispersion of enriched uranium in BeO, but by the time Tory II-C was built zirconia and yttria was added in a 1.06:1:1
molar ratio of urania:zirconia:yttria. The tubes consisted of a BeO
matrix containing, in a solid solution, a dispersion of
urania (),
zirconia () and
yttria () with a grain size between in diameter. The zirconia and yttria stabilized the urania against
phase transition to
triuranium octoxide () at temperatures around . The dispersed fuel particles of the urania-zirconia-yttria mixture (known as "horseradish") were mostly from in size, although some were smaller or larger. The uranium was in the form of
uranium enriched to 93.2 percent
uranium-235 (known as "oralloy"). The tubes had a hexagonal cross-section measuring from one flat side to the opposite, with a diameter hole in the center. They were closely packed to form a honeycomb pattern. Over 80 percent of the fueled tubes were long; the rest varied in length so as to achieve the correct column length and arrangement. The metal tie rods were made of
René 41 and
Hastelloy R235 and were cooled so they did not exceed . The ceramic tubes surrounding the tie rods (known as guard tubes) were unfueled and had smaller diameter holes. The core was surrounded by
neutron reflectors on all sides. The forward reflector was thick and the aft reflector thick. Both were composed of BeO tubes. The side reflector consisted of of BeO tubes around which was of
nickel shims. The reactor was controlled through the movement of
hafnium control rods that moved axially within the tie rods. Twelve of the rods, known as shim rods, were located about from the central axis of the core, while two were located closer to the reflector; one was a
vernier rod and the other as a safety rod. Normally the movement of the rods was restricted to but in the event of a
scram they could be moved in 1.5 seconds. The shim rods were moved by four
actuators, each of which handled three shim rods. The shim rods were long and in diameter, with a travel. The contract to manufacture the fuel elements was awarded to the
Coors Porcelain Company. The process of making horseradish involved mixing
sinterable BeO powder with oralloy
uranyl nitrate,
yttrium nitrate and
zirconium nitrate to form a
slurry which was
coprecipitated by adding
ammonium nitrate. Because the process involved
oralloy, criticality safety required a long, narrow geometry for the mix tanks. The mixture was filtered, dried and
calcined at . It was then blended with a binding mixture containing
polyvinyl alcohol,
methyl cellulose and water and
extruded through a
die at to form the tubes. The tubes were dried, the binder was burned out by heating to , and they were
fired in
hydrogen at to densify them. The maximum permissible effect on reactivity due to impurities in the tubes was 2 to 3 percent. In practice it was only 0.5 percent. == Test facilities ==