Nuclear proliferationNC State awarded $25 million NNSA grant to launch nuclear proliferation detection effort

Published 21 April 2014

North Carolina State University was awarded a 5-year, $25 million grant by the National Nuclear Security Administration’s (NNSA) to develop the next generation of leaders with practical experience in technical fields relevant to nuclear nonproliferation. The new Consortium for Nonproliferation Enabling Capabilities, or CNEC, aims to be the pre-eminent research and education hub dedicated to the development of enabling technologies and technical talent for meeting the challenges of nuclear nonproliferation in the next decade.

North Carolina State University was awarded a 5-year, $25 million grant by the National Nuclear Security Administration’s (NNSA) Office of Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation Research and Development to develop the next generation of leaders with practical experience in technical fields relevant to nuclear nonproliferation. NC State was selected by NNSA over twenty-two other proposals following a competitive process that began in May 2013.

An NC State release reports that the vision of the new Consortium for Nonproliferation Enabling Capabilities, or CNEC, is to be the pre-eminent research and education hub dedicated to the development of enabling technologies and technical talent for meeting the challenges of nuclear nonproliferation in the next decade.

“For NC State to be selected to lead this vital national effort is a testament to our great faculty and strong leadership in nuclear engineering,” said NC State chancellor Randy Woodson. “NC State is increasingly recognized as the university of choice for government and industry partners who want to collaborate with world-leading faculty and students to solve some of our nation’s biggest challenges.”

The release notes that the award announcement follows NC State’s selection by the Department of Energy in January to lead a $140 million manufacturing innovation institute to develop next-generation power electronics. In August 2013 NC State was chosen by the National Security Agency (NSA) to create the $60 million Laboratory for Analytic Sciences to advance the science of big data.

The NC State-led CNEC will implement educational activities with the goal to develop a pool of future nuclear nonproliferation and other nuclear security professionals and researchers. In addition, the consortium will provide the U.S. government with cutting-edge research and development to identify and address multidisciplinary and cross-functional technology and research needs that are critical to detecting foreign nuclear weapon proliferation activities.

Specifically, the research projects pursued by the consortium will include technologies to enhance simulation capabilities, algorithms and modeling; new test and evaluation models for detection sensors; new remote-sensing capabilities; and applications of data analytics and data fusion to better characterize and detect special nuclear materials.

“This grant will link students with world-class researchers and introduce them to career possibilities at the national labs while providing education in areas of great importance for the nonproliferation mission,” said NNSA deputy administrator for Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation Anne Harrington.

Robin Gardner, NC State professor of nuclear and chemical engineering and director of the Center for Engineering Applications of Radioisotopes, or CEAR, will lead the consortium; John Mattingly, associate professor of nuclear engineering, is co-principal investigator on the project. Other CNEC partners include the University of Michigan, Purdue University, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Kansas State, Georgia Tech, and North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University, as well as several national laboratories, including Los Alamos, Oak Ridge, and Pacific Northwest.

At NC State, CNEC will engage nine faculty members in six departments spanning three colleges. It will annually involve two undergraduates, thirteen graduate students, as well as five post-doctoral fellows. Additionally, CNEC will establish a competitive graduate fellowship program which will sponsor six fellows per year. It is designed to attract top talent to the research and development areas critical for nuclear non-proliferation missions.