Yellowcake is milled uranium oxide, known to chemists as U3O8.
When uranium ore comes out of the mine, it actually contains fairly
little of the precious radioactive element. Though some mines in Canada,
the world's leading uranium producer, are now yielding ore that
contains 20 percent uranium, lower purity levels are more typical. Ore
that contains less than 1 percent uranium is not unusual.
The milling process gets rid of the useless minerals that dominate
the ore. First, raw ore is passed through a series of industrial-sized
crushers and grinders. The resulting "pulped" ore is then bathed in
sulphuric acid, a process which leaches out the uranium. After some
drying and filtering, the end product is yellowcake: a coarse, oxidized
powder that is often yellow in color but can also have a red or gray
tint, depending on the number and type of impurities that may remain.
Ideally, a drum of yellowcake should wind up looking something like this.
Yellowcake is a first step toward enriched uranium, but it's a long way from being weapons-grade. The powder must still be converted into uranium hexafluoride
before it can be enriched, the process that makes the sort of uranium
used by nuclear power plants and bomb-makers alike. Because UF6 can be easily turned into a gas, it is ideal for enrichment, which must be done in a gaseous state.
Despite all the hubbub over Saddam Hussein's efforts to buy
yellowcake, the stuff is by no means a rare commodity. Worldwide
production is currently around 64,000 tons per year, and that's sure to
rise as Central Asian nations like Kazakhstan begin to expand their
uranium-mining industries. (By comparison, about 45,000 tons of
tungsten, vital to the steel industry, is produced annually.) The
competition has depressed yellowcake prices just a tad in recent months;
a pound now costs about $10.90, down a dime from what it was trading
for this spring.
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