UNITED NUCLEAR CORPORATION - HEMATITE MISSOURI
Also known as:
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Mallinckrodt Chemical Works
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Mallinckrodt Chemical Works Chemical Division
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Mallinckrodt Nuclear Division
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WEC
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United Nuclear Corporation
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Gulf United Nuclear Fuels Corporation
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General Atomic Company
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Combustion Engineering Inc.
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Asea Brown Boveri
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Westinghouse Electric Company
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Hematite Facility/Hematite Site/Hematite Property
Time Period:
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AWE January 7, 1956 - December 1973
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Residual Radiation January 1974 - October 2011
Facility Type: Atomic Weapons Employer (AWE)
Compensation: As of 05/31/2015, the total compensation paid under Part B of the EEOICPA, including medical compensation, for workers suffering from the effects of having worked at United Nuclear Corp. is $9,948,908.
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Facility Description
United Nuclear Corporation (UNC), located in Hematite, Missouri, manufactured uranium metal and uranium metal compounds from natural and enriched uranium for use as nuclear fuel. The facility became operational in 1956, initially producing uranium products for use in the naval fuel program. Specifically, the site was used to convert government-owned and leased uranium hexafluoride (UF6) gas of various uranium-235 (U-235) enrichments to uranium oxide, uranium carbide, uranium dioxide pellets, and uranium metal. These products were manufactured for use by the federal government and government contractors and by commercial and research reactors approved by the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC). Research and development was also conducted at the site, as were uranium scrap
recovery processes.
From its inception in 1956 through 1974, the Hematite facility was used primarily in support of government contracts that required production of high-enriched uranium (HEU) products. From 1974 through the plant closure in 2001, the focus was on commercial fuel production. The Hematite plant used enriched uranium derived in part from recycled fuel, resulting in the potential for the presence of trace amounts of transuranic radionuclides, neptunium-237 (Np-237), plutonium-239/plutonium-240 (Pu-239/240), and americium-241 (Am-241). For an approximately nine-month period in 1964, UNC also blended thorium dioxide powder with uranium dioxide powder to produce fuel pellets for use in fuel assemblies for the Elk River Reactor (Pellet Plant Data, 1964; Swallow, 1963; Swallow, 1964a).
The primary source of the internal radiation exposure was deposition of alpha-emitting materials via inhalation and ingestion of airborne uranium and thorium (and progeny). Operations at the UNC-Hematite facility potentially would have resulted in external exposures primarily to uranium and uranium decay products.
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(Technical Basis Document for the United Nuclear Corporation, Hematite, Missouri
Effective Date: 03/21/2011)



Untold Stories
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From left, Brenda Pigg, a former Hematite plant employee, and Debbie Jordan, the widow of Gene Jordan who worked at Hematite, have worked to file a Special Exposure Cohort petition in hopes of providing compensation and medical care to all former Hematite facility workers and their survivors.



