Zippe-type Centrifuge

The Zippe-type centrifuge is a device designed to enrich naturally mixed Uranium isotopes in the rarer fissile isotope Uranium-235 by preferentially accumulating it by isotopic separation. It was originally developed in the Soviet Union by a team led by 60 Austrian and German scientists and engineers captured after World War II, working in detention. In the West (and now generally) the type is known by the name of the man who recreated the technology after his return to the West in 1956, based on his recollection of his work in (and contributions to) the Soviet program, Gernot Zippe. To the extent that it might be referred to in Soviet/Russian usage by any one person's name, it was known (at least at a somewhat earlier stage of development) as a Kamenev centrifuge (after Evgeni Kamenev.)

Read more about Zippe-type Centrifuge:  Background, Centrifuge Uranium Enrichment, Global Usage