Grogs said:
They had a great show on this recently. It was one of the 'Ten Days That Changed the World' on the History Channel. It started with Teller and Szilard driving to Einstein's house to ask if he'd sign the first letter, then progressed through the first and second letters, the CP-1 reactor, and all the way to the dropping of the first bomb on Hiroshima.
Grogs,
Yes - I also saw that program and recommend it highly.
The History Channel does some good stuff - however sometimes they really get it
wrong. Last night on the "Super Tools - Ships" segment of Modern Marvels, they
discussed how the plasma torch used for cutting steel plates for building aircraft
carriers employs Hafnium because of its high temperature characteristics.
They go on to say that the high temperature characteristics of Hafnium is also the
reason it is used in the control rods of some nuclear reactors.
WRONG WRONG WRONG, History Channel.
Hafnium is used in the control rods of nuclear reactors because it has a high
neutron capture cross-section - it gobbles up neutrons - which is what a control rod
has to do. The temperatures experienced by the control rods is only a few hundred
degrees. There are other materials in the control rods and drives and the associated
areas of the reactor that can't take the high temperatures that Hafnium can - but don't
need to - because the temperatures don't get that high.
Hafnium is used in control rods because it a neutron absorber. One can also use
Cadmium and Boron as control absorber - and they don't have the high temperature
characteristics that Hafnium has - characteristics that are not needed in control rods.
Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist