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Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant (PGDP)
The Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant is
located in western Kentucky, 10 miles west of the City of Paducah. The
plant, inside a 3,422-acre tract of property, is owned by the Department of
Energy. The site contains uranium enrichment process equipment and support
facilities. The mission of the Plant is to "enrich" uranium for use in
domestic and foreign commercial power reactors. Enrichment involves
increasing the percentage of uranium-235 in the material used for creating
reactor fuel (UF6). Uranium-235 is highly fissionable, unlike the more
common isotope uranium-238. The PGDP enriches the UF6 from roughly 0.7
percent uranium-235 to about 2.75 percent uranium-235. In the 1960s, the
Paducah plant's mission changed from enriching uranium for nuclear weapons
to a more commercial focus. Today, the USEC facilities in Paducah, Kentucky,
and Portsmouth, Ohio, work in tandem to enrich uranium for fuel in
commercial nuclear power plants. The Paducah plant enriches uranium up to
2.75 percent and then ships it to the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant for
further enrichment to five percent. Past operations at the plant have
resulted in the contamination of a number of areas, both at the site and
beyond its boundaries, with radioactive and hazardous materials.
The plant, which employs approximately 1,700 people, has a fenced area of
about 750 acres, 74 of which contain process buildings under roof that
include nearly 1,800 enrichment stages. The plant has a design capacity of
11.3 million SWU per year. SWU stands for separative work unit, the industry
standard for measuring uranium enrichment services. Customers pay for the
number of SWU required to enrich their uranium feed to their specifications.
In August 1950, the U.S. government
determined that it would need to double the capacity of domestic fissionable
materials production that existed at the Oak Ridge K-25 Plant. The Atomic
Energy Commission (AEC) selected a Plant option consisting of 400 stages
modeled after the K-31 facility at Oak Ridge (which would become C-331 at
the Paducah Plant) and 480 stages twice the size of the Oak Ridge K-31
stages (which would become C-333 at the Paducah Plant). Based on a decision
to disperse the major portions of the new production capacity, eight areas
were identified as candidate locations for the Plant, all in the
southeastern U.S. From the application of additional criteria, three sites
were identified: the Kentucky Ordnance Works (KOW) at Paducah, the Louisiana
Ordnance Plant at Shreveport, and the Longhorn Ordnance Works at Marshall,
Texas. From these, the AEC approved, on October 18, 1950, the KOW site as
the location for the new gaseous diffusion plant.
PGDP construction spanned 1951 through 1956 and was conducted in two
phases. Construction of the first phase began January 2, 1951, and included
erection of the following process and production facilities: C-331 and
C-333, the gaseous diffusion process buildings; C-410/420, UF6 Feed Plant;
C-310, Purge and Product Withdrawal Building; C-315, Surge and Waste
Building; and C-300, Central Control Building. Authorization to proceed with
the second phase of Plant construction was received on July 15, 1952. Two
additional enrichment facilities, C-335 and C-337, were added, and
construction was completed in 1956.
On January 6, 1951, the Tennessee Valley Authority began construction of
the four-unit Shawnee Steam Plant near the Paducah Plant on the Ohio River
to provide a portion of the needed electricity. On February 15, 1951,
Electric Energy, Incorporated began construction of the Joppa Steam Plant,
in Joppa, Illinois, to also provide electricity to PGDP.
Although major construction activities would continue through 1956, Union
Carbide began hiring approximately 1,700 permanent Plant workers in 1951.
The first process buildings, C-331, C-333, C-310, and C-315, were completed
and started operation in September 1952, and the first product was withdrawn
in November. PGDP enriches feed material in the form of UF6 gas with
approximately 0.7 percent uranium-235 to UF6 with one to three percent
uranium-235. The enriched product from PGDP was sent to other DOE sites at
Portsmouth or Oak Ridge for further enrichment. Most UF6 feed material came
from the depleted tails produced during normal diffusion operations at PGDP
and from Oak Ridge and Portsmouth. From 1952 through 1977, UF6 feed material
was also produced from uranium trioxide or UO3 (called "yellowcake") at PGDP
in Buildings C-410 and C-420; this feed material was supplied by sources
such as El Dorado Mining and Refining, Mallinkrodt Chemical Works, and
General Chemicals (now Allied Chemical) and comprised less than 10 percent
of the UF6 fed to the cascade. From 1953 through 1964 and intermittently
from 1968 through 1977, the feed plant also produced UF6 from UO3 from spent
reactor fuel processed at the Hanford and Savannah River sites. After 1977,
all feed came in the form of UF6 from outside sources such as Oak Ridge,
Portsmouth, and Allied Chemical.
Carbide and Chemicals Company (which became Union Carbide Corporation
Nuclear Division) was named as the original site contractor based on the
company's experience with gaseous diffusion operations at Oak Ridge. Carbide
operated PGDP for the AEC, and its successor agencies the Energy Research
and Development Administration (ERDA) and DOE, until 1984, when they were
replaced through a competitive procurement by Martin Marietta Energy
Systems, Inc.
In July 1993, the United States Enrichment Corporation, through
Congressional legislation, became responsible for uranium enrichment
operations at PGDP. Although the plant is now leased and operated by US
Enrichment Corporation, environmental restoration and related waste
management activities associated with past practices will be conducted by
the Department of Energy. However, under the provisions of the lease, future
plant shut down and cleanup activities will be the responsibility of US
Enrichment Corporation.
PADUCAH PLANT TIMELINE
| December 1950 |
U.S. government selects
former Kentucky Ordnance Works site in Paducah for new uranium
enrichment plant. |
| December 1950 |
U.S. officials name Carbide
and Carbon Chemicals Company (now Union Carbide) to operate plant. |
| September 1952 |
First production cells go "onstream." |
| November 1952 |
Operator withdraws first
product and ships. |
| Mid-1960s |
Plant shifts from military
mission to commercial application to supply enriched uranium to electric
utilities operating nuclear power plants. |
| January 1975 |
Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) and the Energy Research and Development Agency (ERDA)
assume AEC functions. NRC takes over regulatory oversight of nuclear
power plants and ERDA, which would later be absorbed by the Department
of Energy (DOE), assumes responsibility for uranium enrichment. |
| October 1977 |
Government transfers ERDA
functions to newly created DOE. |
| April 1984 |
Martin Marietta Energy
Systems, Inc. takes over Union Carbide's operating contract for plant. |
| November 1992 |
Energy Policy Act creates
USEC to take over government's uranium enrichment enterprise. |
| July 1993 |
USEC assumes responsibility
for Paducah, Kentucky, and Portsmouth, Ohio, uranium enrichment plants. |
| July 1993 |
USEC contracts with Martin
Marietta Utility Services, a newly created subsidiary of Martin
Marietta, for operation and maintenance of enrichment plants. |
| June 1995 |
Lockheed Martin Corporation
forms after merger of Lockheed and Martin Marietta corporations.
Lockheed Martin Utility Services, Inc. (LMUS) continues operation of
USEC's Paducah plant. |
| June 1995 |
Paducah plant reaches
record two million man-hours of work without a lost workday. |
| November 1995 |
USEC revises and renews
operating contract with LMUS from cost-plus to performance-based
contract. |
| November 1996 |
NRC grants certificates of
compliance for USEC's two enrichment plants. |
| March 1997 |
Regulatory oversight of
enrichment plants officially transfers from DOE to NRC. |
| July, 1998 |
USEC is privatized; becomes
USEC Inc., an investor owned corporation. |
| May, 1999 |
USEC takes over direct
operation of Paducah GDP. |
| Federal Site Acreage |
3,425 |
| Gaseous Diffusion Plant Acreage |
750 |
| Total Number of Buildings |
161 |
| Process Buildings |
4 |
| Process Building Dimensions |
1,100 ft. long, 970 ft. wide, 90 ft. high |
| Process Building Acreage Under Roof |
74 acres |
| Number of Enrichment Stages |
1,760 |
| Peak Design Power Capacty |
3,040 megawatts |
| Largest Process Motor |
3,300 horsepower |
| Water Utilization |
26 million gallons per day |
| Number of Control Instruments |
85,000 |
| Miles of Process Piping |
400 (approximately) |
| Miles of Roadway |
19 |
| Miles of Railroad |
9 |
| Miles of Perimeter Fence |
5 miles |
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Toll Transfer and Receiving Facility Trucks
deliver cylinders full of natural assay uranium hexafluoride (UF-6) to
the plant's Toll Transfer and Receiving Facility. Incoming cylinders are
inspected, weighed and sampled. |
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Feed Facilities The plant feeds UF-6 into its
enrichment process at one of two feed facilities. Here, large
containment autoclaves are used to heat the cylinders, converting the
solid UF-6 to a liquid and then to a gas. |
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Central Control Center The
Central Control facility is the heart of the plant. From this location,
the Shift Superintendent and his staff monitor plant functions around
the clock. Careful coordination is required to balance the plant's
production needs and electricity purchases. Also based here is the
plant's Emergency Operations Center, a specially trained group of
managers that can be summoned at any time to respond to a plant
emergency. |
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Process Buildings There are four
enrichment process buildings at the plant, each supported by its own
switchyard and cooling towers. The buildings house the motors,
compressors and process piping used to enrich uranium. The steaming
cooling towers are part of the plant's recirculating cooling water
system. Evaporation claims about 12 million gallons of that water every
day. Water pumped from the nearby Ohio River replaces what is lost as
steam. |
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Converters Production equipment inside the
process buildings is made up of converters like this one. Each converter
contains separating barriers and gas cooler. An axial compressor,
powered by an electric motor, pumps gas through each converter. |
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Product Withdrawal Facility Enriched UF-6 is
removed from the process at the Product Withdrawal Facility. It is
cooled to convert the gas back to a liquid, then drained into the
cylinders. The liquid is allowed to cool and return to a solid form
before it is transported. |
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Cylinder Shipping Cylinders of enriched uranium
hexafluoride (UF-6) are loaded into protective overpacks for shipment to
the Portsmouth, Ohio, plant for further enrichment before being shipped
to USEC customers around the world. |
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Switchyards There are four switchyards at the
plant to control and route the incoming electricity. |
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Cooling Towers Each process building has its own
set of cooling towers. The cooling towers remove the heat generated
during the enrichment process. Up to 12 million gallons of water are
lost each day through steam-off from the cooling towers. |
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Administration Building This administration
building houses the general manager's office, the engineering
organization, accounting functions, computer and telecommunications
support. A medical center and cafeteria are also located here. |
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Fire Station A fully equipped fire-fighting team
is a key element in the plant's emergency response program. |
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