Chalk River Laboratories

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The Chalk River Laboratories (also known as Chalk River Labs and formerly the Chalk River Nuclear Laboratories) is a Canadian nuclear research facility located near Chalk River, Ontario.

The facility arose out of a 1942 collaboration between British and Canadian nuclear researchers which saw a Montreal research laboratory established under the National Research Council of Canada (NRC). By 1944 the Chalk River Labs were opened and in September, 1945 the facility saw the first nuclear reactor outside of the United States go operational. In 1946, NRC closed the Montreal lab and focused its resources on Chalk River.

In 1952, Atomic Energy of Canada Limited (AECL), was created by the government to promote peaceful use of nuclear energy. AECL also took over operation of Chalk River from the NRC. Throughout the 1950s-2000s various nuclear research reactors have been opened by AECL for production of nuclear material for medical and scientific applications. The Labs produce about half of the world's medical isotopes.

Chalk River Labs are also near the site of Canada's first nuclear power plant, a partnership between AECL and Hydro-Electric Power Commission of Ontario, which went online in 1962. This reactor, Nuclear Power Demonstration (NPD), was a demonstration of the CANDU design, one of the world's safest and most successful nuclear reactors.

Chalk River was also the site of two nuclear accidents in the 1950's. The first incident occurred in 1952, when there was a partial meltdown of the NRX reactor core. The second accident, in 1958, involved a fuel rupture and fire in the NRU reactor building. Both accidents required a major cleanup effort involving many civilian and military personnel. Follow-up health monitoring of these workers has not revealed an adverse impact of the two accidents.[1][2] (At least one cleanup worker, part of the military contingent assigned to NRU, applied for a military disability pension due to health damages. According to the Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility, an anti-nuclear group that denies the existence of the follow-up health studies, the Pension Board rejected the request as the claimant's presence at the site cannot be confirmed.)[3]

Chalk River Labs remain an AECL facility to this day and are used as both a research (in partnership with the NRC) and production facility (on behalf of AECL) in support of other Canadian electrical utilities.

It has been alleged that the word crud originated as an acronym for Chalk River Unidentified Deposit,[4][5] based on deposits that were discovered to form on early test fuels irradiated at Chalk River Laboratories. However, since etymological dictionaries claim a much older origin for the term (a metathesis form of curd), its association with Chalk River Laboratories was likely a convenient re-construction ("backronym") within the nuclear industry.

[edit] Major facilities

  • ZEEP - Zero Energy Experimental Pile Reactor (1945-1973).
  • NRX - NRX Reactor (1947-1992).
  • NRU - National Research Universal 135 MWt Reactor (1957-).
  • PTR - Pool Test 10 kW Reactor (1957-1990).
  • ZED-2 - Zero Energy Deuterium 200W Reactor (1960-).
  • NPD - Nuclear Power Demonstration 20MW(e) Reactor; located north of CRL in Rolphton, Ontario (1960-1987).
  • SLOWPOKE - Safe Low-Power Kritical Experiment 5 kW Reactor (1970-1976) - moved to the University of Toronto in 1971.
  • TASCC - Tandem Accelerator Superconducting Cyclotron
  • MAPLE-1 - Multipurpose Applied Physics Lattice Experiment Reactor (2000-).
  • MAPLE-2 - Multipurpose Applied Physics Lattice Experiment Reactor (2003-).

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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