North Carolina State University. Dept. of Nuclear Engineering.
The nuclear engineering program at North Carolina State University continues its traditional role in educational leadership and innovation. Over the years, the program has sought to meet the needs of the time and to anticipate future developments. In 1950, Clifford Beck, then of Oak Ridge, Tennessee, obtained support from N. C. State's Dean of Engineering, Harold Lampe,for the idea of building the nation's first university nuclear reactor and establishing the first university nuclear engineering educational curriculum. New faculty joining Dr. Beck included A. C. Menius, Jr., Raymond Murray, Arthur Waltner, and Newton Underwood. The team successfully met and overcame the challenges of the period after World War II: resistance to an entirely new discipline, the absence of textbooks, and security limitations on information about reactors. Approval was secured to offer the Ph.D.degree, in addition to the M.S. and B.S. degrees.
The early student body consisted of a number of highly qualified U.S. Air Force officers, who set standards of excellence for students to come later. Graduates of nuclear engineering now are leaders in government, industry, and education. A high percentage of the graduates entered university teaching. The nuclear engineering faculty was among the group that presented special training to foreign scientists and engineers in the Atoms for Peace program, an experiment in sharing nuclear technology on an international basis. North Carolina State's pioneering experiment in nuclear education became the center of attention of the United States and the world. In the early days of nuclear reactor research and development, the curricula were highly science oriented. More recently, greater emphasis been placed on engineering applications. Research by the faculty and graduate students in basic subjects such as nuclear physics and reactor theory has been supplemented by studies of many engineering topics and radiation applications.
Paralleling the transition in the nuclear field from basic experiments to commercial power, the nuclear program at N. C. State has built and operated a sequence of reactors: a water boiler, an MTR plate type reactor, and the present 1-megawatt PULSTAR, with uranium oxide fuel and pulsing capability. Each reactor has been used for student training, research, and services to other organizations in North Carolina and the United States. Services and training have included neutron activation analysis, reactor operator training, neutron radiography, radioisotope production and special courses.
The undergraduate curriculum achieved and has maintained engineering accreditation. The curriculum has consistently provided well-rounded undergraduate training. The ranks of the faculty expanded after 1963 to include Albert Carnesale, Kuruvilla Verghese, Thomas Elleman, Raymond Saxe, James Bohannon, Ephraim Stam, Robin Gardner, Lloyd Zumwalt, and Jerome Kohl. Authorization was gained from the North Carolina General Assembly to construct the Burlington Engineering Laboratories, which now house the department and the new reactor.
For the first decades of the program, much of the financial support was from the federal government through grants, fellowships, and research contracts. More recently, the maturing nuclear industry has taken part of the responsibility for encouraging high school graduates to elect nuclear engineering and for supporting the education of these future employees.
The program continues to grow, both in the number of faculty members and in the scope of its offerings. Important recent additions include the Center for Engineering Applications of Radioisotopes, the Electric Power Research Center, the Thermal Hydraulics Laboratory, the Nuclear Materials Research Laboratory, and the Fusion and Plasma Research and Teaching Program. Each of these activities is in the exciting forefront of the nuclear field.
Additional information and resources on the history of the Department of Nuclear Engineering can be found through the NCSU Historical State website .
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1961 -1964 :H. A. Lamonds -
1964 -1974 :Raymond L. Murray -
1974 -1979 :Thomas Elleman -
1979 -1980 :R. F. Saxe, acting head -
1980 -1990 :Paul J. Turinsky -
1990 -2001 :Donald J. Dudziak -
2001 -: Paul J. Turinsky
From the guide to the North Carolina State University, Department of Nuclear Engineering records, 1950 - 1999, (Special Collections Research Center)
Role | Title | Holding Repository |
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Filters:
Relation | Name | |
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associatedWith | Kohl, Jerome | person |
associatedWith | National Science Foundation (U.S.) | corporateBody |
associatedWith | North Carolina State University | corporateBody |
associatedWith | North Carolina State University. College of Engineering. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | North Carolina State University. Libraries. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | North Carolina State University. Office of the Chancellor. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Raymond L. Murray | person |
associatedWith | U.S. Atomic Energy Commission. | corporateBody |
Place Name | Admin Code | Country | |
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North Carolina |
Subject |
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Engineering |
Engineering |
Engineering |
Nuclear engineering |
Nuclear engineering |
Nuclear engineering |
Nuclear reactors |
Nuclear reactors |
Occupation |
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Activity |
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Corporate Body
Active 1950
Active 1999