Printing Destruction: AM, WMD, and the Emerging Challenges to Security

Hot-fire testing of an additively manufactured copper alloy combustion chamber and a nozzle made of a high-strength hydrogen-resistant alloy (NASA).
Hot-fire testing of an additively manufactured copper alloy combustion chamber and a nozzle made of a high-strength hydrogen-resistant alloy (NASA).

Presented: August 16, 2023 12:00 pm
Presented by: Gregory Nichols

This webinar will contain CUI and is restricted to U.S. government and contractors. Registrants may be asked to provide verification of their status. A link will be provided for verified users on the day of the webinar.

Additive manufacturing (AM) offers significant advantages over more traditional types of manufacturing technologies, including a smaller facility footprint, reduced energy and resource needs, and increased output capacity in less time. These characteristics of AM are revolutionizing production, maintenance, and a whole host of other activities in the defense-industrial base. Unfortunately, they can also provide a strategic advantage to groups that traditionally have not had access to the large-scale production capacity and other resources needed to produce weapons for waging war, engage in terrorism, and sustain insurgency activities. This webinar will introduce some of the challenges to security that AM poses, especially regarding weapons of mass destruction (WMD) proliferation, and will hopefully start a conversation on how to address some of these emerging challenges.

This webinar presentation contains CUI and is therefore limited to government and contractors only. Eligible registrants will receive a secure link to the webinar the morning of the presentation.

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