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Protomet announces $30 million, 200-job expansion, but moving is an option

Posted at 11:49 am February 2, 2016
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Protomet-Walt-Weaver-Feb-2-2016

Protomet Corporation on Tuesday, Feb. 2, 2016, announced a $30 million, 200-job expansion, but the landlocked company could move to another county—or even another state. Pictured above is Protomet production associate Walt Weaver. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

Note: This story was last updated at 11:35 a.m. Feb. 3.

Protomet Corporation on Tuesday announced a $30 million, 200-job expansion, but the landlocked company could move to another county—or even another state.

Protomet is now located in the Bethel Valley Industrial Park in south Oak Ridge.

The company hopes to break ground on the 100,000-square-foot expansion in June and plans to add 200 new jobs during the next five years. Protomet now has 70 workers in a 40,000-square-foot building on eight acres, so the company would more than triple in size.

Besides staying put, Protomet is also looking at sites in Roane County (the Horizon Center in west Oak Ridge), Loudon and Monroe counties, and South Carolina. The company is looking at some tracts of land outside Anderson County that are more than 25 acres. Protomet needs about 25-30 acres for the expansion, and right now, it doesn’t have it. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Business, Front Page News, Oak Ridge, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Bethel Valley Industrial Park, DOE, expansion, Horizon Center, IDB, Jeff Bohanan, John Huling, Nana Liberatore, Oak Ridge Chamber of Commerce, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge Industrial Development Board, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, Parker Hardy, payment in lieu of taxes, PILOT, Protomet, Protomet Corporation, PTM Edge, PTM Edge Watersports, tax abatement, U.S. Department of Energy, Walt Weaver

Tech 2020 winding down operations; Pro2Serve among its success stories

Posted at 1:53 pm January 31, 2016
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Technology-2020-Jan-27-2016

The board of directors for Technology 2020, which is located in Commerce Park in south Oak Ridge, voted Tuesday, Jan. 26, 2016, to wind down operations after more than two decades. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

Tech 2020—a nonprofit organization that counts Pro2Serve, a technical and engineering services firm, as one of its early success stories—announced last week that it is winding down operations after more than two decades.

Facing increased financial pressures, the Tech 2020 Board of Directors voted Tuesday, January 26, to begin an orderly process to wind down their operations, a press release said. The organization has been focused on technology-based economic development activities in the Knoxville-Oak Ridge region.

Tech 2020 once had 12 to 15 employees or more, but it is now down to less than five full-time employees, said Tom Ballard, past Tech 2020 chair and longtime Executive Committee member who was on the founding board. The organization has one building at Commerce Park in south Oak Ridge and manages a second building, an entrepreneurial center, for the City of Oak Ridge.

Tech 2020 was established in 1994 in Oak Ridge with significant grants from BellSouth, now part of the AT&T enterprise, and others, the press release said. The organization’s initial focus areas were telecommunications and entrepreneurship. One of its early creations was Digital Crossing Networks LLC, which is located in downtown Knoxville.

Pro2Serve is another success story, Ballard said. The company went from a home office to the Tech 2020 building to headquarters in the National Energy Security Center in the Oak Ridge Science and Technology Park at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. The company now has more than 350 employees. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Business, Business, Community, Knoxville, Nonprofits, Oak Ridge, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: AT&T, Barry Goss, Battelle Memorial Institute, BellSouth, CEG, Center for Entrepreneurial Growth, City of Oak Ridge, Digital Crossing Networks LLC, Don Sundquist, economic development, Knoxville, Launch Tennessee, Mark Watson, National Energy Security Center, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge Entrepreneurial Center, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge Science and Technology Park, ORNL, Pro2Serve, Tech 20/20, Technology 2020, Tennessee Technology Development Corporation, Teri Brahams, Tom Ballard, University of Tennessee, UT

ORNL supports new projects to develop advanced nuclear technologies

Posted at 3:17 am January 22, 2016
By Oak Ridge National Laboratory Leave a Comment

Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory will support two new DOE-funded projects to explore, develop, and demonstrate advanced nuclear reactor technologies.

The projects announced January 15 will allow industry-led teams with participants from universities and national laboratories to further nuclear energy technology, and will enable companies to further develop their advanced reactor designs with potential for demonstration in the mid-2030s. Initially, DOE’s investment will be $6 million for each project and both companies will provide cost-share. The possible multi-year cost-share value for this research is up to $80 million.

A project led by Southern Company Services, a subsidiary of Southern Company, focuses on molten chloride fast reactors, or MCFRs. The effort includes ORNL, TerraPower, the Electric Power Research Institute, and Vanderbilt University. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: advanced reactor designs, BWX Technologies Inc., DOE, Electric Power Research Institute, Idaho National Laboratory, MCFR, molten chloride fast reactors, Molten Salt Reator Experiment, nuclear energy technology, nuclear reactor, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Office of Nuclear Energy, Oregon State University, ORNL, SGL Group, Southern Company, Southern Company Services, Teledyne-Brown Engineering, TerraPower, U.S. Department of Energy, Vanderbilt University, X-energy

Colburn, an ORHS senior, named finalist in Intel science competition

Posted at 2:50 am January 22, 2016
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Thomas Colburn

Thomas Colburn

Thomas Colburn, a senior at Oak Ridge High School, has been named a finalist in an Intel science competition after a two-year project conducted with help from an Oak Ridge National Laboratory mentor. Colburn is one of only 40 U.S. high school seniors to be chosen as a finalist and the only one from Tennessee.

He’s also the first finalist from ORHS in the competition, the Intel Science Talent Search, which is described as the nation’s oldest and most prestigious pre-college science and math competition.

Colburn’s two-year project is titled “Enhanced Decomposition of Plastic Waste through Photocatalysis.” It was mentored by Todd Toops from the Fuels, Engines, and Emissions Research Center at ORNL.

The 40 finalists receive an all-expenses-paid trip to Washington, D.C., from March 10-16 to compete for more than $1 million in awards provided by the Intel Foundation, including three first-place Medal of Distinction awards of $150,000 each that will be presented to students who show exceptional scientific potential in three areas: basic research, global good, and innovation, a press release said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Education, Front Page News, K-12, Top Stories Tagged With: Intel, Intel science competition, Intel Science Talent Search, Intel STS, Jessica Williams, Oak Ridge High School, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge Schools, ORHS, ORNL, science and math competition, Thomas Colburn, Todd Toops

Council to receive briefing on Manhattan Project park from Park Service on Tuesday

Posted at 11:29 am January 16, 2016
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Niki-Nicholas-National-Park-Service

Niki Nicholas

The Oak Ridge City Council will receive a briefing on the new Manhattan Project National Historical Park on Tuesday.

The briefing by Niki Nicholas, superintendent of the Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area, will be during a Tuesday evening work session on January 21. It will follow a special 6 p.m. City Council meeting for boards and commissions elections in the Oak Ridge Municipal Building Courtroom. (See the work session agenda here. See the special meeting agenda here.)

There will also be an orientation session next week for those interested in volunteering for the new park, which includes Oak Ridge, Tennessee; Hanford, Washington; and Los Alamos, New Mexico. That orientation session starts at 10 a.m. Thursday, January 21, at the Midtown Community Center at 102 Robertsville Road. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Federal, Front Page News, Government, Meetings and Events, Oak Ridge, Top Stories Tagged With: Alexander Inn, Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area, Building 9204-3, Building 9731, East Tennessee Technology Park, Graphite Reactor, Hanford, K-25 Building, Los Alamos, Manhattan Project, Manhattan Project National Historical Park, Midtown Community Center, Municipal Building Courtroom, Niki Nicholas, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge City Council, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, U.S. Department of Energy, Y-12, Y-12 National Security Complex

Synthetic material from ORNL used in discovery of new elements 115, 117

Posted at 10:41 pm January 6, 2016
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

ORNL Berkelium-249

Berkelium-249, contained in the greenish fluid in the tip of the vial, was crucial to the experiment that discovered element 117. It was made in the research reactor at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory. (Photo by ORNL)

 

Twenty-two milligrams of a very pure synthetic material produced at Oak Ridge National Laboratory were used in the discovery of two new chemical elements that will help fill out the seventh row of the periodic table.

The synthetic element, berkelium-249, was produced in a project that started with a six-month irradiation of a target material at the High Flux Isotope Reactor at ORNL. The resulting product was separated and processed during a three-month period at the lab’s Radiochemical Engineering Development Center.

The berkelium-249 was then shipped to the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research, or JINR, in Dubna, Russia, where it was intensely bombarded, or irradiated, with calcium-48 ions, creating six atoms of element 117, said Jim Roberto, ORNL associate lab director for science and technology partnerships. Berkelium-249, which does not exist in nature, has a 300-day lifetime, so researchers had a short time to do their experiments.

Element 117 is one of four new elements that have been officially verified by the International Union for Pure and Applied Chemistry. The IUPAC announced the discoveries on December 30. The other three are elements 113, 115, and 118. Element 115 is produced when element 117 decays. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, Slider, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: berkelium-249, californium-252, chemical elements, element 113, element 115, element 117, element 118, element 61, Glenn Seaborg, Graphite Reactor, GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research, High Flux Isotope Reactor, International Union for Pure and Applied Chemistry, IUPAC, Jim Roberto, JINR, Joint Institute for Nuclear Research, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, neutrons, new elements, nuclei, nucleus, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, periodic table, promethium, protons, Radiochemical Engineering Development Center, RIKEN, thermal neutron flux, Thom Mason, U.S. Department of Energy, University of Tennessee, UT, Vanderbilt University

ORNL plays role as four new elements added to periodic table, filling seventh row

Posted at 2:09 pm January 5, 2016
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Periodic Table of Elements

Periodic Table of Elements (Image by Los Alamos National Laboratory)

 

Note: This story was updated at 10:56 p.m. Jan. 6.

Four new elements have been added to the periodic table, filling the seventh row, or period, and Oak Ridge National Laboratory played a role in discovering two of them.

The discovery and assignment of elements with atomic numbers 113, 115, 117, and 118 was announced on December 30 by the International Association of Pure and Applied Chemistry. The discoveries have been officially verified.

ORNL participated in the discovery of elements 115 and 117 in a collaboration between the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Dubna, Russia, and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California.

The discoverers, who also include researchers in Japan, will now be invited to suggest permanent names and symbols.

For now, the elements are known as: [Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, Slider, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: Dmitri Mendeleev, element 113, element 114, element 115, element 116, element 117, element 118, Fl, flerovium, International Association of Pure and Applied Chemistry, International Union of Pure and Applied Physics, IUPAC, IUPAP, Jan Reedijk, Joint Institute for Nuclear Research, Joint Working Party, JWP, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, livermorium, Lv, Mark C. Cesa, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, Paul J. Karol, periodic table, Pure and Applied Chemistry, RIKEN, Riken Institute, Uuo, Uup, Uus, Uut

New contractor operating Transuranic Waste Processing Center

Posted at 1:36 pm December 30, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Transuranic Waste Processing Center

The Transuranic Waste Processing Center in west Oak Ridge, south of Bethel Valley Road on Highway 95, is pictured above. (Photo courtesy of U.S. Department of Energy/Oak Ridge Office)

 

Information from Oak Ridge Today and the January 2016 issue of “Advocate,” a publication of the Oak Ridge Site Specific Advisory Board

North Wind Solutions took over the operation of the Transuranic Waste Processing Center in west Oak Ridge in December. The Idaho-based company was awarded the $123 million contract to operate the facility in June.

North Wind replaces Wastren Advantage Inc., which had operated the center since 2010. The Transuranic Waste Processing Center, or TRU Waste Processing Center, is off State Route 95 in southwest Oak Ridge, south of Bethel Valley Road and west of Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

North Wind will continue to process and store transuranic waste at the site until the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant, or WIPP, reopens in New Mexico. WIPP is the only facility in the U.S. that permanently disposes of transuranic waste, or TRU waste. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Oak Ridge Office, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: DOE, legacy transuranic waste, North Wind Solutions, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge Site Specific Advisory Board, ORNL, transuranic waste, Transuranic Waste Processing Center, TRU waste, TRU Waste Processing Center, U.S. Department of Energy, Waste Isolation Pilot Plant, Wastren Advantage Inc., WIPP

UT-ORNL breakthrough aims to improve tech gadgets, TVs

Posted at 1:54 pm December 28, 2015
By University of Tennessee Leave a Comment

Ramki-Kalyanaraman

Ramki Kalyanaraman

Whether at home, work, or play, touchscreen devices have quickly become one of the hallmarks of the modern world.

Phones, tablets, computers, and even televisions use the technology, which relies on substances known as transparent conductive films. All but a small fraction of those films are made from a particular class of oxides that, although they do the job very effectively, contain rare and costly elements.

Now, thanks to a breakthrough led by the University of Tennessee in Knoxville and Oak Ridge National Laboratory, that problem could soon be in the past.

“The electronics industry relies heavily on the use of Indium metal for the many situations requiring the right balance of transparency and current carrying ability,” said UT Professor Ramki Kalyanaraman. “While Indium is scarce, our new material contains elements that are far more abundant such as iron, terbium, and dysprosium.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Front Page News, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences, dysprosium, engineering, Indium, iron, materials science, nature, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, Quantum Information Science Group, Ramki Kalyanaraman, terbium, University of Tennessee, UT, UT-ORNL Bredesen Center for Interdisciplinary Research and Graduate Education

Plutonium-238 produced at ORNL helps restores ability to power NASA space missions

Posted at 1:35 pm December 23, 2015
By Oak Ridge National Laboratory Leave a Comment

ORNL-Plutonium-238

By producing 50 grams of plutonium-238, Oak Ridge National Laboratory researchers have demonstrated the nation’s ability to provide a valuable energy source for deep space missions. (Photo by ORNL)

 

With the production of 50 grams of plutonium-238, researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory have restored a U.S. capability dormant for nearly 30 years and set the course to provide power for NASA and other missions.

Plutonium-238 produces heat as it decays, and it can be used in systems that power spacecraft instruments. The new sample, which is in the same oxide powder form used to manufacture heat sources for power systems, represents the first end-to-end demonstration of a plutonium-238 production capability in the United States since the Savannah River Plant in South Carolina ceased production of the material in the late 1980s.

Researchers will analyze the sample for chemical purity and plutonium-238 content, then verify production efficiency models and determine whether adjustments need to be made before scaling up the process.

“Once we automate and scale up the process, the nation will have a long-range capability to produce radioisotope power systems such as those used by NASA for deep space exploration,” said Bob Wham, who leads the project for the lab’s Nuclear Security and Isotope Technology Division. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: Bob Wham, deep space missions, DOE Office of Nuclear Energy, DOE Office of Science, High Flux Isotope Reactor, Idaho National Laboratory, Los Alamos National Laboratory, NASA, NASA mission, neptunium oxide, neptunium-237, neptunium-238, Nuclear Security and Isotope Technology Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, plutonium-238, spacecraft, U.S. Department of Energy

UCOR repairs water leak at Oak Ridge Research Reactor at ORNL

Posted at 12:24 pm December 18, 2015
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Oak-Ridge-Research-Reactor-Pool-Valve-Workers-December-2015

Workers turn off the valves after draining of the pool was completed at the Oak Ridge Research Reactor at ORNL. (Photo by UCOR)

 

Workers have repaired a water leak at the Oak Ridge Research Reactor at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, officials said this week.

The completion of the work was announced by UCOR, a federal cleanup contractor and partnership between URS and CH2M Oak Ridge LLC.

The seep was detected in the reactor’s pool in September 2014. While it did not pose any immediate dangers to workers or the environment, it prompted quick action by the U.S. Department of Energy, which oversees ORNL. DOE asked UCOR, its prime cleanup contractor, to develop and implement a solution to remedy the seep, a press release said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, Slider, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: AREVA, CH2M Oak Ridge LLC, cleanup contractor, irradiation facility, isotope production, Ken Rueter, Liquid and Gaseous Waste Operations facility, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge Research Reactor, ORNL, radioactive material, research reactor, U.S. Department of Energy, UCOR, URS, Waste Control Specialists Facility, water leak

ORNL technique could set new course for extracting uranium from seawater

Posted at 1:41 pm December 17, 2015
By Oak Ridge National Laboratory Leave a Comment

ORNL-TOC-Graphic

Using high-energy X-rays, researchers discovered uranium is bound by adsorbent fibers in an unanticipated fashion. (Image by ORNL)

 

An ultra-high-resolution technique used for the first time to study polymer fibers that trap uranium in seawater may cause researchers to rethink the best methods to harvest this potential fuel for nuclear reactors.

The work of a team led by Carter Abney, a Wigner Fellow at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, shows that the polymeric adsorbent materials that bind uranium behave nothing like scientists had believed. The results, gained through collaboration with the University of Chicago and detailed in a paper published in Energy and Environmental Science, highlight data made possible with X-ray Absorption Fine Structure spectroscopy performed at the Advanced Photon Source. The APS is a DOE Office of Science User Facility at Argonne National Laboratory.

“Despite the low concentration of uranium and the presence of many other metals extracted from seawater, we were able to investigate the local atomic environment around uranium and better understand how it is bound by the polymer fibers,” Abney said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Front Page News, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Top Stories, U.S. Department of Energy Tagged With: Advanced Photon Source, APS, Argonne National Laboratory, Carter Abney, DOE Office of Science, Energy and Environmental Science, extracting uranium, Gabriel Veith, Marek Piechowicz, National Energy Research Scientific Computing Centre, nuclear reactors, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Office of Nuclear Energy, ORNL, Richard Mayes, Sheng Dai, U.S. Department of Energy, University of Chicago, uranium, Vyacheslav Bryantsev, Wenbin Lin, Zekai Lin

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