With a focus on global security and scientific collaboration, the University of Florida hosted hundreds of students, professors and national laboratory scientists and engineers last week for the 2025 National Nuclear Security Administration R&D University Program Review.
Held June 3-5, the event showcased five university consortia driving innovation in national nuclear security. UF leads the Consortium for Nuclear Forensics (CNF). Funded by a $26.4 million award from the NNSA, CNF comprises 16 universities and seven national laboratories to advance the United States’ nuclear forensics capabilities.
Serving as a technical symposium and a strategic oversight forum, the University Program Review (UPR) welcomed around 300 attendees to UF’s G. Edward Evans Champions Club over three days. Participants presented and evaluated research progress, aligned work with the NNSA mission priorities and highlighted university and national laboratory collaborations.
“By linking students, faculty and national-lab mentors around shared nonproliferation goals, we turn fresh ideas into transformational technologies that sustain U.S. excellence in nuclear security.”
Kyle Hartig, UF associate professor of Nuclear Engineering
The event emphasized fundamental research and workforce development and supported the growth of the student talent pipeline through discussions and networking opportunities with national laboratory representatives. Through plenary talks, poster sessions and awards, the event encouraged cross-consortia exchanges, shaped future research and reinforced accountability for technologies that detect, deter and respond to nuclear-proliferation threats.
“One of the great things about attending a conference like UPR is being able to meet other students who are doing similar work and have similar goals in terms of either going into the industry or even collaborating with national labs,” said Abby Robb, a graduate student at Georgia Institute of Technology who presented research on Advanced Gamma-Ray Spectroscopy. “It’s a great place for us to find national lab spokespersons who already have a pipeline for the students.”
Among the poster presentations was Josephine Hartmann, a Ph.D. student from North Carolina State University who showcased her research on coating strategies for nanoparticles.
“Conferences like these allow students, professors and researchers to collaborate, look at problems and help one another figure out the best ways in solving these challenges,” said Hartmann.
James Baciak, Ph.D., professor of Nuclear Engineering and the director of the CNF at UF, led the opening of each day’s activities and provided keynote presentations on research, teaching and student mentoring in nuclear and national security.
“Hosting the UPR 2025 at UF underscored the transformative power of partnership,” he said. “When academia and the national labs align with NNSA’s mission, we accelerate discovery, cultivate the next generation of experts and ensure the United States remains at the forefront of nuclear-security science.”
“Seeing the UPR come to life on our campus showed how powerful the NNSA consortium model is,” added Kyle C. Hartig, Ph.D., associate professor of Nuclear Engineering and UF CNF associate director. “By linking students, faculty and national-lab mentors around shared nonproliferation goals, we turn fresh ideas into transformational technologies that sustain U.S. excellence in nuclear security and deliver deterrence through capability, all while shaping a workforce ready to tackle tomorrow’s nuclear-security challenges.”
As global security threats become increasingly complex, participants agreed that the UPR has evolved from a routine progress check into a catalyst for innovation and talent. The event connected students, scientists and national labs in a shared commitment to uphold America’s security, deter adversaries and promote global stability.