• 3D printers built complex concrete parts faster, yet long-term durability remains largely untested
  • Oak Ridge finished reactor shielding in days, raising speed-versus-safety debates across the industry
  • Advanced construction methods rely more on software, reducing labor yet increasing system dependence

In East Tennessee, a 3D printer arm has been used to build concrete shielding columns for a nuclear reactor.

The work is part of the Hermes Low-Power Demonstration Reactor project, supported by the US Department of Energy, and marks a new direction in how nuclear infrastructure is built, with both 3D printing and AI tools playing major roles.



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